INTERSIL ISL62883CHRTZ

ISL62883C
Features
The ISL62883C is a multiphase PWM buck regulator for
miroprocessor or graphics processor core power supply.
The multiphase buck converter uses interleaved phase to
reduce the total output voltage ripple with each phase
carrying a portion of the total load current, providing
better system performance, superior thermal
management, lower component cost, reduced power
dissipation, and smaller implementation area. The
ISL62883C uses two integrated gate drivers and an
external gate driver to provide a complete solution. The
PWM modulator is based on Intersil's Robust Ripple
Regulator (R3) technology™. Compared with traditional
modulators, the R3™ modulator commands variable
switching frequency during load transients, achieving
faster transient response. With the same modulator, the
switching frequency is reduced at light load, increasing
the regulator efficiency.
• Programmable 1, 2- or 3-Phase CPU or GPU Mode of
Operation
• Precision Multiphase Core Voltage Regulation
- 0.5% System Accuracy Over-Temperature
- Enhanced Load Line Accuracy
• Microprocessor Voltage Identification Input
- 7-Bit VID Input, 0V to 1.500V in 12.5mV Steps
- Supports VID Changes On-The-Fly
• Supports Multiple Current Sensing Methods
- Lossless Inductor DCR Current Sensing
- Precision Resistor Current Sensing
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
The ISL62883C can be configured as CPU or graphics
Vcore controller and is fully compliant with IMVP-6.5™
specifications. It responds to PSI# and DPRSLPVR signals
by adding or dropping PWM3 and Phase 2 respectively,
adjusting overcurrent protection threshold accordingly,
and entering/exiting diode emulation mode. It reports
the regulator output current through the IMON pin. It
senses the current by using either discrete resistor or
inductor DCR whose variation over temperature can be
thermally compensated by a single NTC thermistor. It
uses differential remote voltage sensing to accurately
regulate the processor die voltage. The adaptive body
diode conduction time reduction function minimizes
the body diode conduction loss in diode emulation
mode. User-selectable overshoot reduction function
offers an option to aggressively reduce the output
capacitors as well as the option to disable it for users
concerned about increased system thermal stress. In
2-Phase configuration, the ISL62883C offers the FB2
function to optimize 1-Phase performance.
Supports PSI# and DPRSLPVR modes
Superior Noise Immunity and Transient Response
Current Monitor and Thermal Monitor
Differential Remote Voltage Sensing
High Efficiency Across Entire Load Range
Two Integrated Gate Drivers
Excellent Dynamic Current Balance
FB2 Function Optimizes 1-Phase Mode Performance
• Adaptive Body Diode Conduction Time Reduction
• User-selectable Overshoot Reduction Function
• Small Footprint 40 Ld 5x5 TQFN Packages
• Pb-Free (RoHS Compliant)
Applications*(see page 42)
• Notebook Core Voltage Regulator
• Notebook GPU Voltage Regulator
Related Literature*(see page 42)
• See AN1460 for ISL62883/ISL62883C Evaluation
Board Application Note “ISL62883EVAL2Z User
Guide”
Load Line Regulation
1.10
1.08
1.06
VIN = 8V
VOUT (V)
1.04
VIN = 12V
1.02
VIN = 19V
1.00
0.98
0.96
0.94
0.92
March 18, 2010
FN7557.1
1
0
5
10
15
20
25
30 35 40
IOUT (A)
45
50
55
60
65
CAUTION: These devices are sensitive to electrostatic discharge; follow proper IC Handling Procedures.
1-888-INTERSIL or 1-888-468-3774 | Intersil (and design) is a registered trademark of Intersil Americas Inc.
Copyright © Intersil Americas Inc. 2009, 2010. All Rights Reserved
All other trademarks mentioned are the property of their respective owners.
ISL62883C
Multiphase PWM Regulator for IMVP-6.5™ Mobile
CPUs and GPUs
ISL62883C
Ordering Information
PART NUMBER
(Note 3)
TEMP. RANGE
(°C)
PART MARKING
PACKAGE
(Pb-Free)
PKG.
DWG. #
ISL62883CIRTZ (Note 2)
62883C IRTZ
-40 to +100
40 Ld 5x5 TQFN
L40.5x5
ISL62883CIRTZ-T (Notes 1, 2)
62883C IRTZ
-40 to +100
40 Ld 5x5 TQFN
L40.5x5
ISL62883CHRTZ (Note 2)
62883C HRTZ
-10 to +100
40 Ld 5x5 TQFN
L40.5x5
ISL62883CHRTZ-T (Notes 1, 2)
62883C HRTZ
-10 to +100
40 Ld 5x5 TQFN
L40.5x5
NOTES:
1. Please refer to TB347 for details on reel specifications.
2. These Intersil Pb-free plastic packaged products employ special Pb-free material sets, molding compounds/die attach
materials, and 100% matte tin plate plus anneal (e3 termination finish, which is RoHS compliant and compatible with both
SnPb and Pb-free soldering operations). Intersil Pb-free products are MSL classified at Pb-free peak reflow temperatures that
meet or exceed the Pb-free requirements of IPC/JEDEC J STD-020.
3. For Moisture Sensitivity Level (MSL), please see device information page for ISL62883C. For more information on MSL please
see techbrief TB363.
Pin Configuration
VID1
VID0
VID2
VID4
VID3
VID6
VID5
DPRSLPVR
VR_ON
CLK_EN#
ISL62883C
(40 LD TQFN)
TOP VIEW
40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 31
30 BOOT2
PGOOD 1
PSI# 2
29 UGATE2
RBIAS 3
28 PHASE2
VR_TT# 4
27 VSSP2
NTC 5
26 LGATE2
GND PAD
(BOTTOM)
VW 6
25 VCCP
COMP 7
24 PWM3
FB 8
23 LGATE1
22 VSSP1
ISEN3/FB2 9
21 PHASE1
ISEN2 10
2
BOOT1
UGATE1
VIN
IMON
VDD
ISUM-
ISUM+
RTN
VSEN
ISEN1
11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20
FN7557.1
March 18, 2010
ISL62883C
Functional Pin Descriptions
ISL62883C
SYMBOL
DESCRIPTION
-
GND
1
PGOOD
2
PSI#
Low load current indicator input. When asserted low, indicates a reduced load-current condition.
3
RBIAS
A resistor to GND sets internal current reference. Use 147kΩ or 47kΩ. The choice of Rbias value,
together with the ISEN2 pin configuration and the external resistance from the COMP pin to
GND, programs the controller to enable/disable the overshoot reduction function and to select
the CPU/GPU mode.
4
VR_TT#
Thermal overload output indicator.
5
NTC
Thermistor input to VR_TT# circuit.
6
VW
A resistor from this pin to COMP programs the switching frequency (8kΩ gives approximately
300kHz).
7
COMP
This pin is the output of the error amplifier. Also, a resistor across this pin and GND adjusts the
overcurrent threshold.
8
FB
9
INSE3/FB2
10
ISEN2
Individual current sensing for Phase 2. When ISEN2 is pulled to 5V VDD, the controller will
disable Phase 2.
11
ISEN1
Individual current sensing for phase 1.
12
VSEN
Remote core voltage sense input. Connect to microprocessor die.
13
RTN
14, 15
ISUM- and
ISUM+
16
VDD
5V bias power.
17
VIN
Battery supply voltage, used for feed-forward.
18
IMON
19
BOOT1
Connect an MLCC capacitor across the BOOT1 and the PHASE1 pins. The boot capacitor is
charged through an internal boot diode connected from the VCCP pin to the BOOT1 pin, each
time the PHASE1 pin drops below VCCP minus the voltage dropped across the internal boot
diode.
20
UGATE1
Output of the Phase-1 high-side MOSFET gate driver. Connect the UGATE1 pin to the gate of the
Phase-1 high-side MOSFET.
21
PHASE1
Current return path for the Phase-1 high-side MOSFET gate driver. Connect the PHASE1 pin to
the node consisting of the high-side MOSFET source, the low-side MOSFET drain, and the output
inductor of Phase-1.
22
VSSP1
Current return path for the Phase-1 low-side MOSFET gate driver. Connect the VSSP1 pin to the
source of the Phase-1 low-side MOSFET through a low impedance path, preferably in parallel
with the traces connecting the LGATE1a and the LGATE1b pins to the gates of the Phase-1 lowside MOSFETs.
23
LGATE1
Output of the Phase-1 low-side MOSFET gate driver. Connect the LGATE1 pin to the gate of the
Phase-1 low-side MOSFET.
24
PWM3
PWM output for Phase 3. When PWM3 is pulled to 5V VDD, the controller will disable Phase-3
and allow other phases to operate.
Signal common of the IC. Unless otherwise stated, signals are referenced to the GND pin.
Power-Good open-drain output indicating when the regulator is able to supply regulated
voltage. Pull up externally with a 680Ω resistor to VCCP or 1.9kΩ to 3.3V.
This pin is the inverting input of the error amplifier.
When the ISL62883C is configured in 3-phase mode, this pin is ISEN3. ISEN3 is the individual
current sensing for phase 3. When the ISL62883C is configured in 2-phase mode, this pin is
FB2. There is a switch between the FB2 pin and the FB pin. The switch is on in 2-phase mode
and is off in 1-phase mode. The components connecting to FB2 are used to adjust the
compensation in 1-phase mode to achieve optimum performance.
Remote voltage sensing return. Connect to ground at microprocessor die.
Droop current sense input.
An analog output. IMON outputs a current proportional to the regulator output current.
3
FN7557.1
March 18, 2010
ISL62883C
Functional Pin Descriptions (Continued)
ISL62883C
SYMBOL
DESCRIPTION
25
VCCP
Input voltage bias for the internal gate drivers. Connect +5V to the VCCP pin. Decouple with at
least 1µF of an MLCC capacitor to VSSP1 and VSSP2 pins respectively.
26
LGATE2
Output of the Phase-2 low-side MOSFET gate driver. Connect the LGATE2 pin to the gate of the
Phase-2 low-side MOSFET.
27
VSSP2
Current return path for the Phase-2 converter low-side MOSFET gate driver. Connect the VSSP2
pin to the source of the Phase-2 low-side MOSFET through a low impedance path, preferably in
parallel with the trace connecting the LGATE2 pin to the gate of the Phase-2 low-side MOSFET.
28
PHASE2
Current return path for the Phase-2 high-side MOSFET gate driver. Connect the PHASE2 pin to
the node consisting of the high-side MOSFET source, the low-side MOSFET drain, and the output
inductor of Phase-2.
29
UGATE2
Output of the Phase-2 high-side MOSFET gate driver. Connect the UGATE2 pin to the gate of the
Phase-2 high-side MOSFET.
30
BOOT2
Connect an MLCC capacitor across the BOOT2 and the PHASE2 pins. The boot capacitor is
charged through an internal boot diode connected from the VCCP pin to the BOOT2 pin, each
time the PHASE2 pin drops below VCCP minus the voltage dropped across the internal boot
diode.
31 thru 37
VID0 thru
VID6
38
VR_ON
39
DPRSLPVR
Deeper sleep enable signal. A high level logic signal on this pin indicates that the microprocessor
is in deeper sleep mode.
40
CLK_EN#
Open drain output to enable system PLL clock. It goes low 13 switching cycles after Vcore is
within 10% of Vboot.
pad
BOTTOM
The bottom pad of ISL62883C is electrically connected to the GND pin inside the IC.It should
also be used as the thermal pad for heat removal.
VID input with VID0 = LSB and VID6 = MSB.
Voltage regulator enable input. A high level logic signal on this pin enables the regulator.
4
FN7557.1
March 18, 2010
ISL62883C
Block Diagram
VDD
VIN VSEN ISEN1 ISEN3 ISEN2 PGOOD CLK_EN#
6µA 54µA 1.20V
VR_ON
PSI#
IBAL2
IBAL3
IBAL1
MODE
CONTROL
PGOOD &
CLK_EN#
LOGIC
CURRENT
BALANCE
DPRSLPVR
1.24V
NTC
IBAL
RBIAS
PROTECTION
BOOT2
FLT
IBAL2 VIN VDAC
VID1
WOC OC
VIN
DAC
AND
SOFTSTART
MODULATOR
CLOCK
COMP
VDAC
COMP
VID4
VW
DRIVER
UGATE2
PHASE2
SHOOT-THROUGH
PROTECTION
LGATE2
DRIVER
IBAL3 VIN VDAC
VID5
VID6
MODULATOR
+
+
RTN
Σ
+
_
FB
VSSP2
PWM3
BOOT1
COMP
E/A
PWM CONTROL LOGIC
VID3
PWM CONTROL LOGIC
VID0
VID2
VR_TT#
IBAL1 VIN VDAC
COMP
VW
MODULATOR
IDROOP
IMON
IMON
+
_
WOC
+
_
CURRENT
COMPARATORS
NUMBER OF
OC
PHASES
2.5X
ISUM+
+
ISUM-
_
CURRENT
SENSE
COMP
GAIN
SELECT
5
60µA
DRIVER
UGATE1
PHASE1
SHOOT-THROUGH
PROTECTION
VCCP
DRIVER
LGATE1
VSSP1
+
Σ
+
ADJ. OCP
THRESHOLD
COMP
GND
FN7557.1
March 18, 2010
ISL62883C
Table of Contents
Ordering Information ......................................................................................................................... 2
Pin Configuration ................................................................................................................................ 2
Functional Pin Descriptions ................................................................................................................ 3
Block Diagram .................................................................................................................................... 5
Table of Contents ............................................................................................................................... 6
Absolute Maximum Ratings ................................................................................................................ 7
Thermal Information .......................................................................................................................... 7
Recommended Operating Conditions .................................................................................................. 7
Electrical Specifications ...................................................................................................................... 7
Gate Driver Timing Diagram ............................................................................................................. 10
Simplified Application Circuits .......................................................................................................... 10
Theory of Operation .......................................................................................................................... 13
Diode Emulation and Period Stretching ............................................................................................... 14
Start-up Timing .............................................................................................................................. 15
Voltage Regulation and Load Line Implementation ............................................................................... 15
Differential Sensing ......................................................................................................................... 17
Phase Current Balancing .................................................................................................................. 18
Modes of Operation ......................................................................................................................... 20
Dynamic Operation .......................................................................................................................... 20
Protections ..................................................................................................................................... 21
FB2 Function .................................................................................................................................. 22
Adaptive Body Diode Conduction Time Reduction ................................................................................. 22
Overshoot Reduction Function ........................................................................................................... 22
Key Component Selection ................................................................................................................. 23
RBIAS ............................................................................................................................................
Inductor DCR Current-Sensing Network .............................................................................................
Resistor Current-Sensing Network ....................................................................................................
Overcurrent Protection.....................................................................................................................
Current Monitor ..............................................................................................................................
Compensator ..................................................................................................................................
Optional Slew Rate Compensation Circuit For 1-Tick VID Transition ........................................................
Voltage Regulator Thermal Throttling .................................................................................................
Current Balancing ...........................................................................................................................
23
23
25
25
26
27
29
30
30
Layout Guidelines ............................................................................................................................. 30
1-PHASE GPU Application Reference Design Bill of Materials ............................................................ 34
2-PHASE CPU Application Reference Design Bill of Materials ............................................................ 35
Typical Performance ......................................................................................................................... 37
Products ........................................................................................................................................... 42
Package Outline Drawing ................................................................................................................. 43
6
FN7557.1
March 18, 2010
ISL62883C
Absolute Maximum Ratings
Thermal Information
Supply Voltage, VDD. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .-0.3V to +7V
Battery Voltage, VIN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . +28V
Boot Voltage (BOOT) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -0.3V to +33V
Boot to Phase Voltage (BOOT-PHASE) . . . . -0.3V to +7V(DC)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -0.3V to +9V(<10ns)
Phase Voltage (PHASE) . . . . . -7V (<20ns Pulse Width, 10µJ)
UGATE Voltage (UGATE) . . . . . . . PHASE-0.3V (DC) to BOOT
. . . . . . . . . PHASE-5V (<20ns Pulse Width, 10µJ) to BOOT
LGATE Voltage
. . . . . . . . . . . -2.5V (<20ns Pulse Width, 5µJ) to VDD+0.3V
All Other Pins. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -0.3V to (VDD +0.3V)
Open Drain Outputs, PGOOD, VR_TT#,
CLK_EN# . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -0.3V to +7V
Thermal Resistance (Typical)
θJA (°C/W) θJC (°C/W)
40 Ld TQFN Package (Notes 4, 5). .
31
2
Maximum Junction Temperature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . +150°C
Maximum Storage Temperature Range . . . -65°C to +150°C
Maximum Junction Temperature (Plastic Package). . . +150°C
Storage Temperature Range . . . . . . . . . . . -65°C to +150°C
Pb-Free Reflow Profile . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .see link below
http://www.intersil.com/pbfree/Pb-FreeReflow.asp
Recommended Operating Conditions
Supply Voltage, VDD .
Battery Voltage, VIN .
Ambient Temperature
ISL62883CHRTZ. . .
ISL62883CIRTZ . . .
Junction Temperature
ISL62883CHRTZ. . .
ISL62883CIRTZ . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . +5V ±5%
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . +4.5V to 25V
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -10°C to +100°C
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -40°C to +100°C
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -10°C to +125°C
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -40°C to +125°C
CAUTION: Do not operate at or near the maximum ratings listed for extended periods of time. Exposure to such conditions may adversely impact
product reliability and result in failures not covered by warranty.
NOTE:
4. θJA is measured in free air with the component mounted on a high effective thermal conductivity test board with “direct attach”
features. See Tech Brief TB379.
5. For θJC, the “case temp” location is the center of the exposed metal pad on the package underside.
Electrical Specifications
PARAMETER
Operating Conditions: VDD = 5V, TA = -40°C to +100°C, fSW = 300kHz,
unless otherwise noted. Boldface limits apply over the operating temperature range,
-40°C to +100°C.
SYMBOL
TEST CONDITIONS
MIN
(Note 6)
TYP
MAX
(Note 6)
UNITS
4
4.6
mA
1
µA
INPUT POWER SUPPLY
+5V Supply Current
IVDD
VR_ON = 1V
VR_ON = 0V
Battery Supply Current
IVIN
VR_ON = 0V
VIN Input Resistance
RVIN
VR_ON = 1V
1
Power-On-Reset Threshold
PORr
VDD rising
PORf
VDD falling
4.00
No load; closed loop, active mode
range
VID = 0.75V to 1.50V,
-0.5
µA
900
4.35
kΩ
4.5
4.15
V
V
SYSTEM AND REFERENCES
System Accuracy
HRTZ
%Error
(VCC_CORE)
IRTZ
%Error
(VCC_CORE)
VID = 0.5V to 0.7375V
-8
+8
mV
-15
+15
mV
No load; closed loop, active mode
range
VID = 0.75V to 1.50V
-0.8
+0.8
%
VID = 0.5V to 0.7375V
-10
+10
mV
+18
mV
ISL62883CHRTZ
1.0945
1.100
1.1055
V
ISL62883CIRTZ
1.0912
1.100
1.1088
V
Maximum Output Voltage
VCC_CORE(max) VID = [0000000]
Minimum Output Voltage
VCC_CORE(min) VID = [1100000]
RBIAS Voltage
RBIAS = 147kΩ
7
%
VID = 0.3V to 0.4875V
VID = 0.3V to 0.4875V
VBOOT
+0.5
-18
1.500
V
0.300
1.45
1.47
V
1.49
V
FN7557.1
March 18, 2010
ISL62883C
Electrical Specifications
PARAMETER
Operating Conditions: VDD = 5V, TA = -40°C to +100°C, fSW = 300kHz,
unless otherwise noted. Boldface limits apply over the operating temperature range,
-40°C to +100°C. (Continued)
SYMBOL
TEST CONDITIONS
MIN
(Note 6)
TYP
MAX
(Note 6)
UNITS
285
300
315
kHz
200
500
kHz
-0.15
+0.15
mV
CHANNEL FREQUENCY
Nominal Channel Frequency
fSW(nom)
Rfset = 7kΩ, 3-channel operation,
VCOMP = 1V
Adjustment Range
AMPLIFIERS
IFB = 0A
Current-Sense Amplifier Input
Offset
Error Amp DC Gain (Note 7)
Av0
Error Amp Gain-Bandwidth
Product (Note 7)
GBW
CL = 20pF
90
dB
18
MHz
ISEN
Imbalance Voltage
Maximum of ISENs - Minimum of
ISENs
1
Input Bias Current
mV
20
nA
POWER-GOOD AND PROTECTION MONITORS
VOL
IPGOOD = 4mA
PGOOD Leakage Current
IOH
PGOOD = 3.3V
PGOOD Delay
tpgd
CLK_ENABLE# LOW to PGOOD HIGH
PGOOD Low Voltage
0.26
0.4
1
µA
7.6
8.9
ms
1.5
Ω
-1
6.3
V
GATE DRIVER
UGATE Pull-Up Resistance
(Note 7)
RUGPU
200mA Source Current
1.0
UGATE Source Current (Note 7)
IUGSRC
UGATE - PHASE = 2.5V
2.0
A
UGATE Sink Resistance (Note 7)
RUGPD
250mA Sink Current
1.0
UGATE Sink Current (Note 7)
IUGSNK
UGATE - PHASE = 2.5V
2.0
1.5
Ω
LGATE Pull-Up Resistance
(Note 7)
RLGPU
250mA Source Current
1.0
LGATE Source Current (Note 7)
ILGSRC
LGATE - VSSP = 2.5V
2.0
LGATE Sink Resistance (Note 7)
RLGPD
250mA Sink Current
0.5
LGATE Sink Current (Note 7)
ILGSNK
LGATE - VSSP = 2.5V
4.0
A
UGATE to LGATE Deadtime
tUGFLGR
UGATE falling to LGATE rising, no load
23
ns
LGATE to UGATE Deadtime
tLGFUGR
LGATE falling to UGATE rising, no load
28
ns
A
1.5
Ω
0.9
Ω
A
BOOTSTRAP DIODE
Forward Voltage
VF
PVCC = 5V, IF = 2mA
Reverse Leakage
IR
VR = 25V
0.58
V
0.2
µA
PROTECTION
Overvoltage Threshold
OVH
Severe Overvoltage Threshold
OVHS
OC Threshold Offset at
Rcomp = Open Circuit
Current Imbalance Threshold
VSEN rising above setpoint for >1ms
VSEN rising for >2µs
150
195
240
1.525
1.55
1.575
V
3-phase configuration, ISUM- pin
current
28.4
30.3
32.2
µA
2-phase configuration, ISUM- pin
current
18.3
20.2
22.1
µA
1-phase configuration, ISUM- pin
current
8.2
10.1
12.0
µA
One ISEN above another ISEN for
>1.2ms
Undervoltage Threshold
UVf
8
mV
VSEN falling below setpoint for
>1.2ms
9
-355
-295
mV
-235
mV
FN7557.1
March 18, 2010
ISL62883C
Electrical Specifications
PARAMETER
Operating Conditions: VDD = 5V, TA = -40°C to +100°C, fSW = 300kHz,
unless otherwise noted. Boldface limits apply over the operating temperature range,
-40°C to +100°C. (Continued)
SYMBOL
TEST CONDITIONS
MIN
(Note 6)
TYP
MAX
(Note 6)
UNITS
0.3
V
LOGIC THRESHOLDS
VR_ON Input Low
VIL
VR_ON Input High
VIH
ISL62883CHRTZ
0.7
V
VIH
ISL62883CIRTZ
0.75
V
VID0-VID6, PSI#, and
DPRSLPVR Input Low
VIL
VID0-VID6, PSI#, and DPRSLPVR
Input High
VIH
0.3
0.7
V
V
PWM
PWM3 Output Low
V0L
Sinking 5mA
PWM3 Output High
V0H
Sourcing 5mA
PWM Tri-State Leakage
1.0
3.5
PWM = 2.5V
V
V
2
µA
THERMAL MONITOR
NTC Source Current
NTC = 1.3V
Over-Temperature Threshold
V (NTC) falling
RTT
I = 20mA
CLK_EN# Low Output Voltage
VOL
I = 4mA
CLK_EN# Leakage Current
IOH
CLK_EN# = 3.3V
VR_TT# Low Output Resistance
53
1.18
60
67
µA
1.2
1.22
V
6.5
9
Ω
0.26
0.4
V
1
µA
CLK_EN# OUTPUT LEVELS
-1
CURRENT MONITOR
IMON Output Current
IIMON
ISUM- pin current = 20µA
114
120
126
µA
ISUM- pin current = 10µA
54
60
66
µA
30
34.5
µA
1.1
1.15
V
ISUM- pin current = 5µA
IMON Clamp Voltage
25.5
VIMONCLAMP
Current Sinking Capability
275
µA
INPUTS
VR_ON Leakage Current
IVR_ON
VR_ON = 0V
-1
VR_ON = 1V
VIDx Leakage Current
IVIDx
VIDx = 0V
0
-1
VIDx = 1V
PSI# Leakage Current
IPSI#
PSI# = 0V
-1
IDPRSLPVR
DPRSLPVR = 0V
-1
µA
1
µA
1
µA
1
µA
6.5
mV/µs
µA
0
0.45
DPRSLPVR = 1V
µA
1
0
0.45
PSI# = 1V
DPRSLPVR Leakage Current
0
µA
0
0.45
µA
SLEW RATE
Slew Rate (For VID Change)
SR
5
NOTES:
6. Parameters with MIN and/or MAX limits are 100% tested at +25°C, unless otherwise specified. Temperature limits established
by characterization and are not production tested.
7. Limits established by characterization and are not production tested.
9
FN7557.1
March 18, 2010
ISL62883C
Gate Driver Timing Diagram
PWM
tLGFUGR
tFU
tRU
1V
UGATE
1V
LGATE
tFL
tRL
tUGFLGR
Simplified Application Circuits
V+5
V+5
Vin
VDD VCCP VIN
Rbias
RBIAS
L3
BOOT
LGATE
GND
PWM3
PWM
ISEN3
BOOT2
Cs3
NTC
C
Vin
VCC
UGATE
FCCM
PHASE
ISL6208
Rntc
o
V+5
Rs3
PGOOD
VR_TT#
CLK_EN#
VID<0:6>
PSI#
DPRSLPVR
VR_ON
PGOOD
VR_TT#
CLK_EN#
VIDs
PSI#
DPRSLPVR
VR_ON
VW
UGATE2
LGATE2
VSSP2
ISEN2
ISL62883C BOOT1
Rfset
L2
PHASE2
Vo
Rs2
Cs2
L1
UGATE1
PHASE1
COMP
FB
LGATE1
VSSP1
Rs1
ISEN1
Rdroop
VSEN
Cs1
Rsum3
ISUM+
Rsum2
VCCSENSE
VSSSENSE
Rn
RTN
Cn
o
C
Rsum1
Rimon
Ri
IMON
IMON
(Bottom Pad)
VSS
ISUM-
FIGURE 1. TYPICAL 3-PHASE APPLICATION CIRCUIT USING DCR SENSING
10
FN7557.1
March 18, 2010
ISL62883C
Simplified Application Circuits (Continued)
V+5
V+5
Vin
V+5
Rbias
RBIAS
Rsen3
L2
Rsen2
L1
Rsen1
BOOT
PWM LGATE
GND
PWM3
NTC
C
L3
ISL6208
Rntc
o
Vin
VCC
UGATE
FCCM
PHASE
VDD VCCP VIN
Rs3
PGOOD
VR_TT#
CLK_EN#
VIDs
PSI#
DPRSLPVR
VR_ON
VW
PGOOD
VR_TT#
CLK_EN#
VID<0:6>
PSI#
DPRSLPVR
VR_ON
ISEN3
BOOT2
Cs3
UGATE2
LGATE2
VSSP2
Rs2
ISEN2
ISL62883C BOOT1
Rfset
Vo
PHASE2
Cs2
UGATE1
PHASE1
COMP
LGATE1
VSSP1
FB
Rs1
ISEN1
Rdroop
Cs2
VSEN
Rsum3
ISUM+
Rsum2
VCCSENSE
VSSSENSE
RTN
Rsum1
Cn
Rimon
Ri
IMON
IMON
(Bottom Pad)
VSS
ISUM-
FIGURE 2. TYPICAL 3-PHASE APPLICATION CIRCUIT USING RESISTOR SENSING
V+5
V+5
Vin
VDD VCCP VIN
Rbias
RBIAS
PWM3
Rntc
NTC
o
C
PGOOD
VR_TT#
CLK_EN#
VIDs
PSI#
DPRSLPVR
VR_ON
VW
PGOOD
VR_TT#
CLK_EN#
VID<0:6>
PSI#
DPRSLPVR
VR_ON
Vin
BOOT2
UGATE2
L2
PHASE2
LGATE2
VSSP2
Vo
Rs2
ISEN2
Cs2
BOOT1
ISL62883C
Rfset
UGATE1
PHASE1
COMP
Rdroop
FB2
FB
L1
LGATE1a
VSSP1
Rs1
ISEN1
Cs1
VSEN
ISUM+
Rsum2
VCCSENSE
VSSSENSE
Rn
Cn
RTN
Rimon
IMON
o
C
Rsum1
Ri
IMON
(Bottom Pad)
VSS
ISUM-
FIGURE 3. TYPICAL 2-PGHASE APPLICATION CIRCUIT USING DCR SENSING
11
FN7557.1
March 18, 2010
ISL62883C
Simplified Application Circuits (Continued)
V+5
V+5
Vin
VDD VCCP VIN
Rbias
RBIAS
PWM3
Rntc
NTC
o
C
BOOT2
PGOOD
VR_TT#
CLK_EN#
VIDs
PSI#
DPRSLPVR
VR_ON
VW
PGOOD
VR_TT#
CLK_EN#
VID<0:6>
PSI#
DPRSLPVR
VR_ON
UGATE2
PHASE2
LGATE2
VSSP2
ISEN2
Vin
BOOT1
ISL62883C
Rfset
UGATE1
PHASE1
COMP
Rdroop
FB2
FB
L
Vo
LGATE1a
VSSP1
ISEN1
VSEN
ISUM+
Rsum
VCCSENSE
VSSSENSE
Rn
Cn
RTN
Rimon
IMON
o
C
Ri
IMON
(Bottom Pad)
VSS
ISUM-
FIGURE 4. TYPICAL 1-PHASE APPLICATION CIRCUIT USING DCR SENSING
12
FN7557.1
March 18, 2010
ISL62883C
Theory of Operation
VW
Multiphase R3™ Modulator
MASTER CLOCK CIRCUIT
MASTER
CLOCK
COMP
Phase
Vcrm
Sequencer
VW
MASTER
CLOCK
gmVo
COMP
Clock1
Clock2
Clock3
Vcrm
Crm
Master
Clock
SLAVE CIRCUIT 1
VW
Clock1
S
R
Q
PWM1 Phase1
L1
IL1
Vcrs1
Vo
Clock1
Co
PWM1
Clock2
gm
PWM2
Crs1
SLAVE CIRCUIT 2
VW
Clock2
S
R
Q
PWM2 Phase2
L2
Clock3
PWM3
IL2
VW
Vcrs2
gm
Crs2
SLAVE CIRCUIT 3
VW
Clock3
S
R
Q
PWM3 Phase3
L3
IL3
Vcrs3
Vcrs1
Vcrs3
Vcrs2
FIGURE 7. R3™ MODULATOROPERATION
PRINCIPLES IN LOAD INSERTION
RESPONSE
gm
Crs3
FIGURE 5. R3™ MODULATOR CIRCUIT
VW
Hysteretic
W indow
Vcrm
COMP
Master
Clock
The ISL62883C is a multiphase regulators implementing
Intel™ IMVP-6.5™ protocol. It can be programmed for
1-, 2- or 3-phase operation. It uses Intersil patented
R3™ (Robust Ripple Regulator™) modulator. The R3™
modulator combines the best features of fixed
frequency PWM and hysteretic PWM while eliminating
many of their shortcomings. Figure 5 conceptually
shows the ISL62883C multiphase R3™ modulator
circuit, and Figure 6 shows the operation principles.
A current source flows from the VW pin to the COMP
pin, creating a voltage window set by the resistor
between the two pins. This voltage window is called
VW window in the following discussion.
Clock1
PW M1
Clock2
PW M2
Clock3
PW M3
VW
Vcrs2 Vcrs3
Vcrs1
FIGURE 6. R3™ MODULATOR OPERATION
PRINCIPLES IN STEADY STATE
13
Inside the IC, the modulator uses the master clock
circuit to generate the clocks for the slave circuits. The
modulator discharges the ripple capacitor Crm with a
current source equal to gmVo, where gm is a gain
factor. Crm voltage Vcrm is a sawtooth waveform
traversing between the VW and COMP voltages. It
resets to VW when it hits COMP, and generates a
one-shot master clock signal. A phase sequencer
distributes the master clock signal to the slave circuits.
If the ISL62883C is in 3-phase mode, the master clock
signal will be distributed to the three phases, and the
Clock1~3 signals will be 120° out-of-phase. If the
ISL62883C is in 2-phase mode, the master clock signal
will be distributed to Phases 1 and 2, and the Clock1
and Clock2 signals will be 180° out-of-phase. If the
FN7557.1
March 18, 2010
ISL62883C
ISL62883C is in 1-phase mode, the master clock signal
will be distributed to Phases 1 only and be the Clock1
signal.
Each slave circuit has its own ripple capacitor Crs,
whose voltage mimics the inductor ripple current. A gm
amplifier converts the inductor voltage into a current
source to charge and discharge Crs. The slave circuit
turns on its PWM pulse upon receiving the clock signal,
and the current source charges Crs. When Crs voltage
VCrs hits VW, the slave circuit turns off the PWM pulse,
and the current source discharges Crs.
Since the ISL62883C works with Vcrs, which are
large-amplitude and noise-free synthesized signals,
the ISL62883C achieves lower phase jitter than
conventional hysteretic mode and fixed PWM mode
controllers. Unlike conventional hysteretic mode
converters, the ISL62883C has an error amplifier that
allows the controller to maintain a 0.5% output voltage
accuracy.
Figure 7 shows the operation principles during load
insertion response. The COMP voltage rises during load
insertion, generating the master clock signal more
quickly, so the PWM pulses turn on earlier, increasing
the effective switching frequency, which allows for
higher control loop bandwidth than conventional fixed
frequency PWM controllers. The VW voltage rises as
the COMP voltage rises, making the PWM pulses wider.
During load release response, the COMP voltage falls.
It takes the master clock circuit longer to generate the
next master clock signal so the PWM pulse is held off
until needed. The VW voltage falls as the VW voltage
falls, reducing the current PWM pulse width. This kind
of behavior gives the ISL62883C excellent response
speed.
The fact that all the phases share the same VW
window voltage also ensures excellent dynamic current
balance among phases.
ISL62883C can operate in diode emulation (DE) mode
to improve light load efficiency. In DE mode, the lowside MOSFET conducts when the current is flowing from
source to drain and doesn’t not allow reverse current,
emulating a diode. As Figure 8 shows, when LGATE is
on, the low-side MOSFET carries current, creating
negative voltage on the phase node due to the voltage
drop across the ON-resistance. The ISL62883C
monitors the current through monitoring the phase
node voltage. It turns off LGATE when the phase node
voltage reaches zero to prevent the inductor current
from reversing the direction and creating unnecessary
power loss.
If the load current is light enough, as Figure 8 shows,
the inductor current will reach and stay at zero before
the next phase node pulse, and the regulator is in
discontinuous conduction mode (DCM). If the load
current is heavy enough, the inductor current will
never reach 0A, and the regulator is in CCM although
the controller is in DE mode.
Figure 9 shows the operation principle in diode
emulation mode at light load. The load gets
incrementally lighter in the three cases from top to
bottom. The PWM on-time is determined by the VW
window size, therefore is the same, making the inductor
current triangle the same in the three cases. The
ISL62883C clamps the ripple capacitor voltage Vcrs in
DE mode to make it mimic the inductor current. It takes
the COMP voltage longer to hit Vcrs, naturally stretching
the switching period. The inductor current triangles
move further apart from each other such that the
inductor current average value is equal to the load
current. The reduced switching frequency helps increase
light load efficiency.
CCM/DCM BOUNDARY
VW
Vcrs
Diode Emulation and Period Stretching
iL
VW
LIGHT DCM
Vcrs
Phase
UG ATE
iL
LG ATE
VW
DEEP DCM
Vcrs
IL
iL
FIGURE 8. DIODE EMULATION
FIGURE 9. PERIOD STRETCHING
14
FN7557.1
March 18, 2010
ISL62883C
Start-up Timing
With the controller's VDD voltage above the POR
threshold, the start-up sequence begins when VR_ON
exceeds the 1.1V logic high threshold. Figure 10 shows
the typical start-up timing when the ISL62883C is
configured for CPU VR application. The ISL62883C uses
digital soft-start to ramp-up DAC to the boot voltage of
1.1V at about 2.5mV/µs. Once the output voltage is
within 10% of the boot voltage for 13 PWM cycles
(43µs for frequency = 300kHz), CLK_EN# is pulled low
and DAC slews at 5mV/µs to the voltage set by the VID
pins. PGOOD is asserted high in approximately 7ms.
Similar results occur if VR_ON is tied to VDD, with the
soft-start sequence starting 120µs after VDD crosses the
POR threshold.
Figure 11 shows the typical start-up timing when the
ISL62883C is configured for GPU VR application. The
ISL62883C uses digital soft start to ramp up DAC to the
voltage set by the VID pins. The slew rate is 5mV/µs
when there is DPRSLPVR = 0, and is doubled when there
is DPRSLPVR = 1. Once the output voltage is within 10%
of the target voltage for 13 PWM cycles (43µs for
frequency = 300kHz), CLK_EN# is pulled low. PGOOD is
asserted high in approximately 7ms. Similar results occur
if VR_ON is tied to VDD, with the soft-start sequence
starting 120µs after VDD crosses the POR threshold.
VDD
5mV/µs
VR_ON
2.5mV/µs
90% Vboot
800µs
DAC
VID
COMMAND
VOLTAGE
13 SWITCHING
CYCLES
CLK_EN#
~7ms
PGOOD
FIGURE 10. SOFT-START WAVEFORMS FOR CPU VR
APPLICATION
VDD
VR_ON
DAC
SLEW
RATE
90%
120µs
VID COMMAND
VOLTAGE
13 SWITCHING
CYCLES
CLK_EN#
~7ms
PGOOD
FIGURE 11. SOFT-START WAVEFORMS FOR GPU VR
APPLICATION
15
Voltage Regulation and Load Line
Implementation
After the start sequence, the ISL62883C regulates the
output voltage to the value set by the VID inputs per
Table 1. The ISL62883C will control the no-load output
voltage to an accuracy of ±0.5% over the range of
0.75V to 1.5V. A differential amplifier allows voltage
sensing for precise voltage regulation at the
microprocessor die.
TABLE 1. VID TABLE
VID6
VID5
VID4
VID3
VID2
VID1
VID0
VO
(V)
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1.5000
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1.4875
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1.4750
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
1.4625
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
1.4500
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
1.4375
0
0
0
0
1
1
0
1.4250
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1.4125
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
1.4000
0
0
0
1
0
0
1
1.3875
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
1.3750
0
0
0
1
0
1
1
1.3625
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
1.3500
0
0
0
1
1
0
1
1.3375
0
0
0
1
1
1
0
1.3250
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
1.3125
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
1.3000
0
0
1
0
0
0
1
1.2875
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
1.2750
0
0
1
0
0
1
1
1.2625
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
1.2500
0
0
1
0
1
0
1
1.2375
0
0
1
0
1
1
0
1.2250
0
0
1
0
1
1
1
1.2125
0
0
1
1
0
0
0
1.2000
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
1.1875
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
1.1750
0
0
1
1
0
1
1
1.1625
0
0
1
1
1
0
0
1.1500
0
0
1
1
1
0
1
1.1375
0
0
1
1
1
1
0
1.1250
0
0
1
1
1
1
1
1.1125
FN7557.1
March 18, 2010
ISL62883C
TABLE 1. VID TABLE (Continued)
TABLE 1. VID TABLE (Continued)
VID6
VID5
VID4
VID3
VID2
VID1
VID0
VO
(V)
VID6
VID5
VID4
VID3
VID2
VID1
VID0
VO
(V)
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
1.1000
1
0
0
0
1
1
1
0.6125
0
1
0
0
0
0
1
1.0875
1
0
0
1
0
0
0
0.6000
0
1
0
0
0
1
0
1.0750
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0.5875
0
1
0
0
0
1
1
1.0625
1
0
0
1
0
1
0
0.5750
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1.0500
1
0
0
1
0
1
1
0.5625
0
1
0
0
1
0
1
1.0375
1
0
0
1
1
0
0
0.5500
0
1
0
0
1
1
0
1.0250
1
0
0
1
1
0
1
0.5375
0
1
0
0
1
1
1
1.0125
1
0
0
1
1
1
0
0.5250
0
1
0
1
0
0
0
1.0000
1
0
0
1
1
1
1
0.5125
0
1
0
1
0
0
1
0.9875
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
0.5000
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
0.9750
1
0
1
0
0
0
1
0.4875
0
1
0
1
0
1
1
0.9625
1
0
1
0
0
1
0
0.4750
0
1
0
1
1
0
0
0.9500
1
0
1
0
0
1
1
0.4625
0
1
0
1
1
0
1
0.9375
1
0
1
0
1
0
0
0.4500
0
1
0
1
1
1
0
0.9250
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0.4375
0
1
0
1
1
1
1
0.9125
1
0
1
0
1
1
0
0.4250
0
1
1
0
0
0
0
0.9000
1
0
1
0
1
1
1
0.4125
0
1
1
0
0
0
1
0.8875
1
0
1
1
0
0
0
0.4000
0
1
1
0
0
1
0
0.8750
1
0
1
1
0
0
1
0.3875
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
0.8625
1
0
1
1
0
1
0
0.3750
0
1
1
0
1
0
0
0.8500
1
0
1
1
0
1
1
0.3625
0
1
1
0
1
0
1
0.8375
1
0
1
1
1
0
0
0.3500
0
1
1
0
1
1
0
0.8250
1
0
1
1
1
0
1
0.3375
0
1
1
0
1
1
1
0.8125
1
0
1
1
1
1
0
0.3250
0
1
1
1
0
0
0
0.8000
1
0
1
1
1
1
1
0.3125
0
1
1
1
0
0
1
0.7875
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0.3000
0
1
1
1
0
1
0
0.7750
1
1
0
0
0
0
1
0.2875
0
1
1
1
0
1
1
0.7625
1
1
0
0
0
1
0
0.2750
0
1
1
1
1
0
0
0.7500
1
1
0
0
0
1
1
0.2625
0
1
1
1
1
0
1
0.7375
1
1
0
0
1
0
0
0.2500
0
1
1
1
1
1
0
0.7250
1
1
0
0
1
0
1
0.2375
0
1
1
1
1
1
1
0.7125
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
0.2250
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.7000
1
1
0
0
1
1
1
0.2125
1
0
0
0
0
0
1
0.6875
1
1
0
1
0
0
0
0.2000
1
0
0
0
0
1
0
0.6750
1
1
0
1
0
0
1
0.1875
1
0
0
0
0
1
1
0.6625
1
1
0
1
0
1
0
0.1750
1
0
0
0
1
0
0
0.6500
1
1
0
1
0
1
1
0.1625
1
0
0
0
1
0
1
0.6375
1
1
0
1
1
0
0
0.1500
1
0
0
0
1
1
0
0.6250
1
1
0
1
1
0
1
0.1375
16
FN7557.1
March 18, 2010
ISL62883C
TABLE 1. VID TABLE (Continued)
VID6
VID5
VID4
VID3
VID2
VID1
VID0
VO
(V)
1
1
0
1
1
1
0
0.1250
1
1
0
1
1
1
1
0.1125
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
0.1000
1
1
1
0
0
0
1
0.0875
1
1
1
0
0
1
0
0.0750
1
1
1
0
0
1
1
0.0625
1
1
1
0
1
0
0
0.0500
1
1
1
0
1
0
1
0.0375
1
1
1
0
1
1
0
0.0250
1
1
1
0
1
1
1
0.0125
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
0.0000
1
1
1
1
0
0
1
0.0000
1
1
1
1
0
1
0
0.0000
1
1
1
1
0
1
1
0.0000
1
1
1
1
1
0
0
0.0000
1
1
1
1
1
0
1
0.0000
1
1
1
1
1
1
0
0.0000
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
0.0000
Rdroop
FB
VR LOCAL
“CATCH”
VO
RESISTOR
Idroop
COMP
E/A
VCCSENSE
Vdroop
Σ VDAC DAC
VIDs
RTN
INTERNAL
TO IC
X1
VID<0:6>
VSSSENSE
VSS
“CATCH”
RESISTOR
FIGURE 12. DIFFERENTIAL SENSING AND LOAD LINE
IMPLEMENTATION
As the load current increases from zero, the output
voltage will droop from the VID table value by an amount
proportional to the load current to achieve the load line.
The ISL62883C can sense the inductor current through
the intrinsic DC Resistance (DCR) of the inductors as
shown in Figure 1 on page 10 or through resistors in
series with the inductors as shown in Figure 2 on
page 11. In both methods, capacitor Cn voltage
represents the inductor total currents. A droop amplifier
converts Cn voltage into an internal current source with
the gain set by resistor Ri. The current source is used for
17
load line implementation, current monitor and
overcurrent protection.
Figure 12 shows the load line implementation. The
ISL62883C drives a current source Idroop out of the FB
pin, described by Equation 1.
2xV Cn
I droop = -----------------Ri
(EQ. 1)
When using inductor DCR current sensing, a single NTC
element is used to compensate the positive temperature
coefficient of the copper winding thus sustaining the load
line accuracy with reduced cost.
Idroop flows through resistor Rdroop and creates a
voltage drop as shown in Equation 2.
V droop = R droop × I droop
(EQ. 2)
Vdroop is the droop voltage required to implement load
line. Changing Rdroop or scaling Idroop can both change
the load line slope. Since Idroop also sets the overcurrent
protection level, it is recommended to first scale Idroop
based on OCP requirement, then select an appropriate
Rdroop value to obtain the desired load line slope.
Differential Sensing
Figure 12 also shows the differential voltage sensing
scheme. VCCSENSE and VSSSENSE are the remote
voltage sensing signals from the processor die. A unity
gain differential amplifier senses the VSSSENSE voltage
and add it to the DAC output. The error amplifier
regulates the inverting and the non-inverting input
voltages to be equal as shown in Equation 3:
VCC SENSE + V
droop
= V DAC + VSS SENSE
(EQ. 3)
Rewriting Equation 3 and substitution of Equation 2 gives
VCCSENSE – VSS SENSE = V DAC – R droop × I droop
(EQ. 4)
Equation 4 is the exact equation required for load line
implementation.
The VCCSENSE and VSSSENSE signals come from the
processor die. The feedback will be open circuit in the
absence of the processor. As Figure 12 shows, it is
recommended to add a “catch” resistor to feed the VR
local output voltage back to the compensator, and add
another “catch” resistor to connect the VR local output
ground to the RTN pin. These resistors, typically
10Ω~100Ω, will provide voltage feedback if the system is
powered up without a processor installed.
FN7557.1
March 18, 2010
ISL62883C
Phase Current Balancing
Rdcr3
L3
Phase3
ISEN3
Rs
ISEN2
Rpcb2
Vo
INTERNAL
TO IC
IL2
Rdcr1
L1
Phase1
Rs
Phase3
Rs
Cs
Rdcr2
L2
Phase2
Rs
Cs
ISEN1
ISEN3
IL3
Cs
INTERNAL
TO IC
Rpcb3
ISEN2
Rpcb1
Rdcr3
L3
IL3
Rs
Rpcb3
V3n
Rs
Phase2
Rs
Cs
V3p
V2p
L2
Rdcr2
IL2
Rs
Rpcb2
Vo
V2n
Rs
IL1
Cs
ISEN1
FIGURE 13. CURRENT BALANCING CIRCUIT
The ISL62883C monitors individual phase average
current by monitoring the ISEN1, ISEN2, and ISEN3
voltages. Figure 13 shows the current balancing circuit
recommended for ISL62883C. Each phase node
voltage is averaged by a low-pass filter consisting of Rs
and Cs, and presented to the corresponding ISEN pin.
Rs should be routed to inductor phase-node pad in
order to eliminate the effect of phase node parasitic
PCB DCR. Equations 5 thru 7 give the ISEN pin
voltages:
V ISEN1 = ( R dcr1 + R pcb1 ) × I L1
(EQ. 5)
V ISEN2 = ( R dcr2 + R pcb2 ) × I L2
(EQ. 6)
V ISEN3 = ( R dcr3 + R pcb3 ) × I L3
(EQ. 7)
where Rdcr1, Rdcr2 and Rdcr3 are inductor DCR; Rpcb1,
Rpcb2 and Rpcb3 are parasitic PCB DCR between the
inductor output side pad and the output voltage rail;
and IL1, IL2 and IL3 are inductor average currents.
The ISL62883C will adjust the phase pulse-width
relative to the other phases to make
VISEN1 = VISEN2 = VISEN3, thus to achieve
IL1 = IL2 = IL3, when there are Rdcr1 = Rdcr2 = Rdcr3
and Rpcb1 = Rpcb2 = Rpcb3.
Using same components for L1, L2 and L3 will provide
a good match of Rdcr1, Rdcr2 and Rdcr3. Board layout
will determine Rpcb1, Rpcb2 and Rpcb3. It is
recommended to have symmetrical layout for the
power delivery path between each inductor and the
output voltage rail, such that Rpcb1 = Rpcb2 = Rpcb3.
V1p
Phase1
Rs
Cs
Rdcr1
L1
IL1
Rs
Rpcb1
V1n
Rs
FIGURE 14. DIFFERENTIAL-SENSING CURRENT
BALANCING CIRCUIT
Sometimes, it is difficult to implement symmetrical
layout. For the circuit shown in Figure 13, asymmetric
layout causes different Rpcb1, Rpcb2 and Rpcb3 thus
current imbalance. Figure 14 shows a
differential-sensing current balancing circuit
recommended for ISL62883C. The current sensing
traces should be routed to the inductor pads so they
only pick up the inductor DCR voltage. Each ISEN pin
sees the average voltage of three sources: its own
phase inductor phase-node pad, and the other two
phases inductor output side pads. Equations 8 thru 10
give the ISEN pin voltages:
V ISEN1 = V 1p + V 2n + V 3n
(EQ. 8)
V ISEN2 = V 1n + V 2p + V 3n
(EQ. 9)
V ISEN3 = V 1n + V 2n + V 3p
(EQ. 10)
The ISL62883C will make VISEN1 = VISEN2 = VISEN3
as shown in Equations 11 and 12:
V 1p + V 2n + V 3n = V 1n + V 2p + V 3n
(EQ. 11)
V 1n + V 2p + V 3n = V 1n + V 2n + V 3p
(EQ. 12)
Rewriting Equation 11 gives Equation 13:
V 1p – V 1n = V 2p – V 2n
(EQ. 13)
and rewriting Equation 12 gives Equation 14:
V 2p – V 2n = V 3p – V 3n
(EQ. 14)
Combining Equations 13 and 14 gives:
V 1p – V 1n = V 2p – V 2n = V 3p – V 3n
(EQ. 15)
Therefore:
R dcr1 × I L1 = R dcr2 × I L2 = R dcr3 × I L3
18
(EQ. 16)
FN7557.1
March 18, 2010
ISL62883C
Current balancing (IL1 = IL2 = IL3) will be achieved
when there is Rdcr1 = Rdcr2 = Rdcr3. Rpcb1, Rpcb2 and
Rpcb3 will not have any effect.
Since the slave ripple capacitor voltages mimic the
inductor currents, R3™ modulator can naturally achieve
excellent current balancing during steady state and
dynamic operations. Figure 15 shows current balancing
performance of the ISL62883C evaluation board with load
transient of 12A/51A at different rep rates. The inductor
currents follow the load current dynamic change with the
output capacitors supplying the difference. The inductor
currents can track the load current well at low rep rate,
but cannot keep up when the rep rate gets into the
hundred-kHz range, where it’s out of the control loop
bandwidth. The controller achieves excellent current
balancing in all cases installed.
REP RATE = 10kHz
REP RATE = 25kHz
CCM Switcing Frequency
The Rfset resistor between the COMP and the VW pins
sets the sets the VW windows size, therefore sets the
switching frequency. When the ISL62883C is in
continuous conduction mode (CCM), the switching
frequency is not absolutely constant due to the nature of
the R3™ modulator. As explained in the Multiphase R3™
Modulator section, the effective switching frequency will
increase during load insertion and will decrease during
load release to achieve fast response. On the other hand,
the switching frequency is relatively constant at steady
state. Variation is expected when the power stage
condition, such as input voltage, output voltage, load,
etc. changes. The variation is usually less than 15% and
doesn’t have any significant effect on output voltage
ripple magnitude. Equation 17 gives an estimate of the
frequency-setting resistor Rfset value. 8kΩ Rfset gives
approximately 300kHz switching frequency. Lower
resistance gives higher switching frequency.
R fset ( kΩ ) = ( Period ( μs ) – 0.29 ) × 2.65
REP RATE = 50kHz
REP RATE = 100kHz
(EQ. 17)
REP RATE = 200kHz
FIGURE 15. ISL62883 EVALUATION BOARD CURRENT
BALANCING DURING DYNAMIC
OPERATION. CH1: IL1, CH2: ILOAD, CH3:
IL2, CH4: IL3
19
FN7557.1
March 18, 2010
ISL62883C
Modes of Operation
TABLE 2. ISL62883C CONFIGURATIONS
PWM3
OVERSHOOT
REDUCTION
RBIAS
ISEN2 CLK_EN# (kΩ) CONFIG. FUNCTION
To
To
External Power
Stage
Driver
Tied to
5V
External
pull-up
147
3-phase
CPU VR
Disabled
Tied to
GND or
floating
147
3-phase
GPU VR
Disabled
External
pull-up
147
2-phase
CPU VR
Disabled
Tied to
GND or
floating
147
2-phase
GPU VR
Disabled
147
1-phase
CPU
See Table 4
47
1-phase
GPU
47
47
47
47
Tied to x
5V
Enabled
Enabled
Enabled
Enabled
CONFIG.
3-phase CPU
Config.
0
0
2-phase CCM
1
0
3-phase CCM
0
1
1-phase DE
1
1
1-phase DE
0
0
2-phase CCM
1
0
3-phase CCM
0
1
1-phase DE
1
1
1-phase DE
0
0
1-phase CCM
1
0
2-phase CCM
0
1
1-phase DE
1
1
1-phase DE
0
0
1-phase CCM
1
0
2-phase CCM
0
1
1-phase DE
1
1
1-phase DE
1-phase CPU
Config.
x
0
1-phase CCM
1
1-phase DE
1-phase GPU
Config.
x
0
1-phase CCM
1
1-phase DE
3-phase GPU
Config.
2-phase CPU
Config.
2-phase GPU
Config.
SLEW
RATE
5mV/µs
10mV/µs
5mV/µs
10mV/µs
5mV/µs
10mV/µs
The ISL62883C can be configured for 3, 2 or 1-phase
operation.
For 2-phase configuration, tie the PWM3 pin to 5V. In this
configuration, phases 1 and 2 are active. For 1-phase
configuration, tie the ISEN2 pin to 5V. In this
configuration, only phase-1 is active.
20
When the ISL62883C is in 3- or 2-phase configuration,
external pull-up on the CLK_EN# pin puts the ISL62883C
in CPU VR configuration; Tying the CLK_EN# pin to GND
or leaving it floating puts the ISL62883C in GPU VR
configuration. In 3- or 2-phase configuration,
RBIAS = 147kΩ disables the overshoot reduction function
and RBIAS = 47kΩ enables it.
If the PWM3 pin and the ISEN2 pin are both tied to 5V,
the ISL62883C is in 1-phase configuration. The CLK_EN#
pin status has no effect. RBIAS = 147kΩ puts the
ISL62883C in CPU VR configuration and RBIAS = 47kΩ
puts the ISL62883C in GPU configuration. In 1-phase
configuration, the enabling and disabling of the
overshoot reduction function are programmed by the
resistance from COMP to GND, as Table 4 shows.
Table 3 shows the ISL62883C operational modes,
programmed by the logic status of the PSI# and the
DPRSLPVR pins.
TABLE 3. ISL62883C MODES OF OPERATION
OPERATIONAL
PSI# DPRSLPVR
MODE
Table 2 shows the ISL62883C configurations,
programmed by the PWM3 pin, the ISEN2 pin, the
CLK_EN# pin status and the RBIAS value.
In 3-phase configuration, the ISL62883C enters 2-phase
CCM for (PSI# = 0 and DPRSLPVR = 0). It drops phase 3
and operates phases 1 and 2 180° out-of-phase. It also
reduces the overcurrent and the way-overcurrent
protection levels to 2/3 of the initial values. The
ISL62883C enters 1-phase DE mode for DPRSLPVR = 1
by dropping phase 2 and reduces the overcurrent and
the way-overcurrent protection levels to 1/3 of the initial
values.
In 2-phase configuration, the ISL62883C enters 1-phase
CCM for (PSI# = 0 and DPRSLPVR = 0). It drops phase 2
and reduces the overcurrent and the way-overcurrent
protection levels to 1/2 of the initial values. The
ISL62883C enters 1-phase DE mode for DPRSLPVR = 1
by dropping phase 2 and reduces the overcurrent and
the way-overcurrent protection levels to 1/3 of the initial
values.
In 1-phase configuration, the ISL62883C does not
change the operational mode when the PSI# signal
changes status. It enters 1-phase DE mode when
DLPRSLPVR = 1.
Dynamic Operation
When the ISL62883C is configured for CPU VR
application, it responds to VID changes by slewing to the
new voltage at 5mV/µs slew rate. As the output
approaches the VID command voltage, the dv/dt
moderates to prevent overshoot. Geyserville-III
transitions commands one LSB VID step (12.5mV) every
2.5µs, controlling the effective dv/dt at 5mv/µs. The
ISL62883C is capable of 5mV/µs slew rate.
When the ISL62883C is configured for GPU VR
application, it responds to VID changes by slewing to the
new voltage at a slew rate set by the logic status on the
DPRSLPVR pin. The slew rate is 5mV/µs when
DPRSLPVR=0 and is doubled when DPRSLPVR = 1.
FN7557.1
March 18, 2010
ISL62883C
When the ISL62883C is in DE mode, it will actively drive
the output voltage up when the VID changes to a higher
value. The DE mode operation will resume after reaching
the new voltage level. If the load is light enough to
warrant DCM, it will enter DCM after the inductor current
has crossed zero for four consecutive cycles. The
ISL62883C will remain in DE mode when the VID
changes to a lower value. The output voltage will decay
to the new value and the load will determine the slew
rate. Overvoltage protection is blanked during VID down
transition in DE mode until the output voltage is within
60mV of the VID value.
During load insertion response, the Fast Clock function
increases the PWM pulse response speed. The
ISL62883C monitors the VSEN pin voltage and compares
it to 100ns-filtered version. When the unfiltered version
is 20mV below the filtered version, the controller knows
there is a fast voltage dip due to load insertion, hence
issues an additional master clock signal to deliver a PWM
pulse immediately.
The R3™ modulator intrinsically has voltage
feed-forward. The output voltage is insensitive to a fast
slew rate input voltage change.
Protections
The ISL62883C provides overcurrent, current-balance,
undervoltage, overvoltage, and over-temperature
protections.
The ISL62883C determines overcurrent protection
(OCP) by comparing the average value of the droop
current Idroop with an internal current source threshold.
It declares OCP when Idroop is above the threshold for
120µs. A resistor Rcomp from the COMP pin to GND
programs the OCP current source threshold, as well as
the overshoot reduction function in 1-phase
configuration, as Table 4 shows. It is recommended to
use the nominal Rcomp value. The ISL62883C detects
the Rcomp value at the beginning of start-up, and sets
the internal OCP threshold accordingly. It remembers
the Rcomp value until the VR_ON signal drops below the
POR threshold.
TABLE 4. ISL62883C Rcomp PROGRAMMABILITY
3-PHASE 2-PHASE
CONFIG. CONFIG.
Rcomp
MIN NOM MAX
(kΩ) (kΩ) (kΩ)
1-PHASECONFIG.
OVERSHOOT
REDUCTION
FUNCTION
OCP THRESHOLD
(µA)
none none
60
40
60
320
400
480
68
45.3
68
210
235
260
62
41.3
62
155
165
175
54
36
54
104
120
136
56
37.33
60
78
85
92
58
38.7
68
62
66
70
64
42.7
62
45
50
55
66
44
54
21
Disabled
Enabled
The default OCP threshold is the value when Rcomp is not
populated. It is recommended to scale the droop current
Idroop such that the default OCP threshold gives
approximately the desired OCP level, then use Rcomp to
fine tune the OCP level if necessary.
For overcurrent conditions above 2.5x the OCP level, the
PWM outputs will immediately shut off and PGOOD will
go low to maximize protection. This protection is also
referred to as way-overcurrent protection or
fast-overcurrent protection, for short-circuit protections.
The ISL62883C monitors the ISEN pin voltages to
determine current-balance protection. If the ISEN pin
voltage difference is greater than 9mV for 1ms, the
controller will declare a fault and latch off.
The ISL62883C will declare undervoltage (UV) fault and
latch off if the output voltage is less than the VID set
value by 300mV or more for 1ms. It’ll turn off the PWM
outputs and de-assert PGOOD.
The ISL62883C has two levels of overvoltage
protections. The first level of overvoltage protection is
referred to as PGOOD overvoltage protection. If the
output voltage exceeds the VID set value by +200mV for
1ms, the ISL62883C will declare a fault and de-assert
PGOOD.
The ISL62883C takes the same actions for all of the
above fault protections: de-assertion of PGOOD and
turn-off of the high-side and low-side power MOSFETs.
Any residual inductor current will decay through the
MOSFET body diodes. These fault conditions can be reset
by bringing VR_ON low or by bringing VDD below the
POR threshold. When VR_ON and VDD return to their
high operating levels, a soft-start will occur.
The second level of overvoltage protection is different.
If the output voltage exceeds 1.55V, the ISL62883C will
immediately declare an OV fault, de-assert PGOOD, and
turn on the low-side power MOSFETs. The low-side
power MOSFETs remain on until the output voltage is
pulled down below 0.85V when all power MOSFETs are
turned off. If the output voltage rises above 1.55V
again, the protection process is repeated. This behavior
provides the maximum amount of protection against
shorted high-side power MOSFETs while preventing
output ringing below ground. Resetting VR_ON cannot
clear the 1.55V OVP. Only resetting VDD will clear it. The
1.55V OVP is active all the time when the controller is
enabled, even if one of the other faults have been
declared. This ensures that the processor is protected
against high-side power MOSFET leakage while the
MOSFETs are commanded off.
The ISL62883C has a thermal throttling feature. If the
voltage on the NTC pin goes below the 1.18V OT
threshold, the VR_TT# pin is pulled low indicating the
need for thermal throttling to the system. No other
action is taken within the ISL62883C in response to NTC
pin voltage.
Table 5 summarizes the fault protections.
FN7557.1
March 18, 2010
ISL62883C
TABLE 5. FAULT PROTECTION SUMMARY
FAULT
DURATION
BEFORE
PROTECTION
PROTECTION
ACTION
FAULT TYPE
Overcurrent
120µs
Way-Overcurrent
(2.5xOC)
<2µs
Overvoltage
+200mV
1ms
FAULT
RESET
PWM tri-state, VR_ON
toggle or
PGOOD
VDD
latched low
toggle
Phase Current
Unbalance
Overvoltage 1.55V
Immediately Low-side
VDD
MOSFET on
toggle
until Vcore
<0.85V, then
PWM tri-state,
PGOOD
latched low.
Over-Temperature
1ms
N/A
Current Monitor
The ISL62883C provides the current monitor function.
The IMON pin outputs a high-speed analog current
source that is 3 times of the droop current flowing out of
the FB pin. Thus Equation 18:
I IMON = 3 × I droop
(EQ. 18)
As Figures 1 and 2 show, a resistor Rimon is connected to
the IMON pin to convert the IMON pin current to voltage.
A capacitor can be paralleled with Rimon to filter the
voltage information. The IMVP-6.5™ specification
requires that the IMON voltage information be referenced
to VSSSENSE.
The IMON pin voltage range is 0V to 1.1V. A clamp circuit
prevents the IMON pin voltage from going above 1.1V.
The FB2 function is only available when the ISL62883C is
in 2-phase configuration.
C1 R2
CONTROLLER IN
2-PHASE MODE
Adaptive Body Diode Conduction Time
Reduction
In DCM, the controller turns off the low-side MOSFET
when the inductor current approaches zero. During ontime of the low-side MOSFET, phase voltage is negative
and the amount is the MOSFET rDS(ON) voltage drop,
which is proportional to the inductor current. A phase
comparator inside the controller monitors the phase
voltage during on-time of the low-side MOSFET and
compares it with a threshold to determine the
zero-crossing point of the inductor current. If the
inductor current has not reached zero when the low-side
MOSFET turns off, it’ll flow through the low-side MOSFET
body diode, causing the phase node to have a larger
voltage drop until it decays to zero. If the inductor
current has crossed zero and reversed the direction when
the low-side MOSFET turns off, it’ll flow through the highside MOSFET body diode, causing the phase node to
have a spike until it decays to zero. The controller
continues monitoring the phase voltage after turning off
the low-side MOSFET and adjusts the phase comparator
threshold voltage accordingly in iterative steps such that
the low-side MOSFET body diode conducts for
approximately 40ns to minimize the body diode-related
loss.
Overshoot Reduction Function
FB2 Function
VSEN
When the FB2 switch is off, C3.2 is disconnected from the
FB pin. However, the controller still actively drives the
FB2 pin voltage to follow the FB pin voltage such that
C3.2 voltage always follows C3.1 voltage. When the
controller turns on the FB2 switch, C3.2 will be
reconnected to the compensator smoothly.
The FB2 function ensures excellent transient response in
both 2-phase mode and 1-phase mode. If one decides
not to use the FB2 function, simply populate C3.1 only.
Undervoltage 300mV
C2 R3
the compensator. The compensator gain will increase
with the removal of C3.2. By properly sizing C3.1 and
C3.2, the compensator cab be optimal for both 2-phase
mode and 1-phase mode.
C3.1
FB2
FB
VREF
C2 R3
C3.2
R1
E/A
C1 R2
CONTROLLER IN
1-PHASE MODE
VSEN
COMP
C3.1
FB2
C3.2
R1
FB
VREF
E/A
COMP
FIGURE 16. FB2 FUNCTION
Figure 16 shows the FB2 function. A switch (called FB2
switch) turns on to short the FB and the FB2 pins when
the controller is in 2-phase mode. Capacitors C3.1 and
C3.2 are in parallel, serving as part of the compensator.
When the controller enters 1-phase mode, the FB2
switch turns off, removing C3.2 and leaving only C3.1 in
22
The ISL62883C has an optional overshoot reduction
function. Tables 2 and 4 show how to enable and disable
it.
When a load release occurs, the energy stored in the
inductors will dump to the output capacitor, causing
output voltage overshoot. The inductor current
freewheels through the low-side MOSFET during this
period of time. The overshoot reduction function turns off
the low-side MOSFET during the output voltage
overshoot, forcing the inductor current to freewheel
through the low-side MOSFET body diode. Since the body
diode voltage drop is much higher than MOSFET rDS(ON)
voltage drop, more energy is dissipated on the low-side
MOSFET therefore the output voltage overshoot is lower.
If the overshoot reduction function is enabled, the
ISL62883C monitors the COMP pin voltage to determine
the output voltage overshoot condition. The COMP
voltage will fall and hit the clamp voltage when the
FN7557.1
March 18, 2010
ISL62883C
output voltage overshoots. The ISL62883C will turn off
LGATE1 and LGATE2 when COMP is being clamped. All
the low-side MOSFETs in the power stage will be turned
off. When the output voltage has reached its peak and
starts to come down, the COMP voltage starts to rise and
is no longer clamped. The ISL62883C will resume normal
PWM operation.
When PSI# is low, indicating a low power state of the
CPU, the controller will disable the overshoot reduction
function as large magnitude transient event is not
expected and overshoot is not a concern.
While the overshoot reduction function reduces the
output voltage overshoot, energy is dissipated on the
low-side MOSFET, causing additional power loss. The
more frequent transient event, the more power loss
dissipated on the low-side MOSFET. The MOSFET may
face severe thermal stress when transient events
happen at a high repetitive rate. User discretion is
advised when this function is enabled.
Key Component Selection
RBIAS
The ISL62883C uses a resistor (1% or better tolerance
is recommended) from the RBIAS pin to GND to
establish highly accurate reference current sources
inside the IC. Refer to Table 2 to select the resistance
according to desired configuration. Do not connect any
other components to this pin. Do not connect any
capacitor to the RBIAS pin as it will create instability.
Care should be taken in layout that the resistor is placed
very close to the RBIAS pin and that a good quality signal
ground is connected to the opposite side of the RBIAS
resistor.
Inductor DCR Current-Sensing Network
Phase1
Phase2
Phase3
Figure 17 shows shows the inductor DCR currentsensing network for a 3-phase solution. An inductor
current flows through the DCR and creates a voltage
drop. Each inductor has two resistors in Rsum and Ro
connected to the pads to accurately sense the inductor
current by sensing the DCR voltage drop. The Rsum and
Ro resistors are connected in a summing network as
shown, and feed the total current information to the
NTC network (consisting of Rntcs, Rntc and Rp) and
capacitor Cn. Rntc is a negative temperature coefficient
(NTC) thermistor, used to temperature-compensate the
inductor DCR change.
The inductor output side pads are electrically shorted in
the schematic, but have some parasitic impedance in
actual board layout, which is why one cannot simply
short them together for the current-sensing summing
network. It is recommended to use 1W~10W Ro to
create quality signals. Since Ro value is much smaller
than the rest of the current sensing circuit, the following
analysis will ignore it for simplicity.
The summed inductor current information is presented
to the capacitor Cn. Equations 19 thru 23 describe the
frequency-domain relationship between inductor total
current Io(s) and Cn voltage VCn(s):
⎛
⎞
R ntcnet
⎜
DCR⎟
V Cn ( s ) = ⎜ ------------------------------------------ × -------------⎟ × I o ( s ) × A cs ( s )
N ⎟
R sum
⎜
⎝ R ntcnet + -------------⎠
N
( R ntcs + R ntc ) × R p
R ntcnet = ---------------------------------------------------R ntcs + R ntc + R p
s
1 + ------ωL
A cs ( s ) = ----------------------s
1 + ------------ω sns
DCR
ω L = ------------L
Rsum
(EQ. 19)
(EQ. 20)
(EQ. 21)
(EQ. 22)
Rsum
ISUM+
Rsum
L
L
L
Rntcs
Rp
DCR
DCR
DCR
Cn Vcn
Ri
ISUM-
Ro
Ro
Io
FIGURE 17. DCR CURRENT-SENSING NETWORK
23
(EQ. 23)
where N is the number of phases.
Rntc
Ro
1
ω sns = -------------------------------------------------------R sum
R ntcnet × --------------N
------------------------------------------ × C n
R sum
R ntcnet + --------------N
Transfer function Acs(s) always has unity gain at DC.
The inductor DCR value increases as the winding
temperature increases, giving higher reading of the
inductor DC current. The NTC Rntc values decreases as
its temperature decreases. Proper selections of Rsum,
Rntcs, Rp and Rntc parameters ensure that VCn
represent the inductor total DC current over the
temperature range of interest.
FN7557.1
March 18, 2010
ISL62883C
There are many sets of parameters that can properly
temperature-compensate the DCR change. Since the
NTC network and the Rsum resistors form a voltage
divider, Vcn is always a fraction of the inductor DCR
voltage. It is recommended to have a higher ratio of Vcn
to the inductor DCR voltage, so the droop circuit has
higher signal level to work with.
A typical set of parameters that provide good
temperature compensation are: Rsum = 3.65kΩ,
Rp = 11kΩ, Rntcs = 2.61kΩ and Rntc = 10kΩ
(ERT-J1VR103J). The NTC network parameters may
need to be fine tuned on actual boards. One can apply
full load DC current and record the output voltage
reading immediately; then record the output voltage
reading again when the board has reached the thermal
steady state. A good NTC network can limit the output
voltage drift to within 2mV. It is recommended to follow
the Intersil evaluation board layout and current-sensing
network parameters to minimize engineering time.
VCn(s) also needs to represent real-time Io(s) for the
controller to achieve good transient response. Transfer
function Acs(s) has a pole wsns and a zero wL. One
needs to match wL and wsns so Acs(s) is unity gain at
all frequencies. By forcing wL equal to wsns and solving
for the solution, Equation 24 gives Cn value.
L
C n = --------------------------------------------------------------R sum
R ntcnet × --------------N
------------------------------------------ × DCR
R sum
R ntcnet + --------------N
Vo
FIGURE 18. DESIRED LOAD TRANSIENT RESPONSE
WAVEFORMS
io
Vo
FIGURE 19. LOAD TRANSIENT RESPONSE WHEN Cn
IS TOO SMALL
io
(EQ. 24)
For example, given N = 3, Rsum = 3.65kΩ, Rp = 11kΩ,
Rntcs = 2.61kΩ, Rntc = 10kΩ, DCR = 0.88mΩ and
L = 0.36µH, Equation 24 gives Cn = 0.406µF.
Assuming the compensator design is correct, Figure 18
shows the expected load transient response waveforms
if Cn is correctly selected. When the load current Icore
has a square change, the output voltage Vcore also has
a square response.
If Cn value is too large or too small, VCn(s) will not
accurately represent real-time Io(s) and will worsen the
transient response. Figure 19 shows the load transient
response when Cn is too small. Vcore will sag excessively
upon load insertion and may create a system failure.
Figure 20 shows the transient response when Cn is too
large. Vcore is sluggish in drooping to its final value.
There will be excessive overshoot if load insertion occurs
during this time, which may potentially hurt the CPU
reliability.
24
io
Vo
FIGURE 20. LOAD TRANSIENT RESPONSE WHEN Cn
IS TOO LARGE
io
iL
Vo
RING
BACK
FIGURE 21. OUTPUT VOLTAGE RING BACK PROBLEM
FN7557.1
March 18, 2010
ISL62883C
ISUM+
Rntcs
Cn.1
Cn.2 Vcn
Rp
Rntc
Rn
OPTIONAL
ISUM-
Ri
transient response waveforms on an actual board. The
recommended range for Cip is 100pF~2000pF. However,
it should be noted that the Rip -Cip branch may distort
the idroop waveform. Instead of being triangular as the
real inductor current, idroop may have sharp spikes,
which may adversely affect idroop average value
detection and therefore may affect OCP accuracy. User
discretion is advised.
Resistor Current-Sensing Network
Phase1
Phase2
Phase3
Cip
L
L
L
OPTIONAL
DCR
DCR
DCR
Rip
Rsum
FIGURE 22. OPTIONAL CIRCUITS FOR RING BACK
REDUCTION
Figure 21 shows the output voltage ring back problem
during load transient response. The load current io has a
fast step change, but the inductor current iL cannot
accurately follow. Instead, iL responds in first order
system fashion due to the nature of current loop. The
ESR and ESL effect of the output capacitors makes the
output voltage Vo dip quickly upon load current change.
However, the controller regulates Vo according to the
droop current idroop, which is a real-time representation
of iL; therefore it pulls Vo back to the level dictated by iL,
causing the ring back problem. This phenomenon is not
observed when the output capacitor have very low ESR
and ESL, such as all ceramic capacitors.
Figure 22 shows two optional circuits for reduction of the
ring back.
Cn is the capacitor used to match the inductor time
constant. It usually takes the parallel of two (or more)
capacitors to get the desired value. Figure 22 shows that
two capacitors Cn.1 and Cn.2 are in parallel. Resistor Rn is
an optional component to reduce the Vo ring back. At
steady state, Cn.1 + Cn.2 provides the desired Cn
capacitance. At the beginning of io change, the effective
capacitance is less because Rn increases the impedance
of the Cn.1 branch. As Figure 19 explains, Vo tends to dip
when Cn is too small, and this effect will reduce the Vo
ring back. This effect is more pronounced when Cn.1 is
much larger than Cn.2. It is also more pronounced when
Rn is bigger. However, the presence of Rn increases the
ripple of the Vn signal if Cn.2 is too small. It is
recommended to keep Cn.2 greater than 2200pF. Rn
value usually is a few ohms. Cn.1, Cn.2 and Rn values
should be determined through tuning the load transient
response waveforms on an actual board.
Rip and Cip form an R-C branch in parallel with Ri,
providing a lower impedance path than Ri at the
beginning of io change. Rip and Cip do not have any
effect at steady state. Through proper selection of Rip
and Cip values, idroop can resemble io rather than iL, and
Vo will not ring back. The recommended value for Rip is
100Ω. Cip should be determined through tuning the load
25
Rsum
ISUM+
Rsum
Rsen
Rsen
Rsen
Vcn
Ro
Cn
Ri
ISUM-
Ro
Ro
Io
FIGURE 23. RESISTOR CURRENT-SENSING NETWORK
Figure 23 shows the resistor current-sensing network for
a 2-phase solution. Each inductor has a series
current-sensing resistor Rsen. Rsum and Ro are
connected to the Rsen pads to accurately capture the
inductor current information. The Rsum and Ro resistors
are connected to capacitor Cn. Rsum and Cn form a a
filter for noise attenuation. Equations 25 thru 27 give
VCn(s) expression
R sen
V Cn ( s ) = ------------- × I o ( s ) × A Rsen ( s )
N
(EQ.25)
1
A Rsen ( s ) = ----------------------s
1 + ------------ω sns
(EQ.26)
1
ω Rsen = ----------------------------R sum
--------------- × C n
N
(EQ.27)
Transfer function ARsen(s) always has unity gain at DC.
Current-sensing resistor Rsen value will not have
significant variation over-temperature, so there is no
need for the NTC network.
The recommended values are Rsum = 1kΩ and
Cn = 5600pF.
Overcurrent Protection
Refer to Equation 1 on page 17 and Figures 17, 21 and
23; resistor Ri sets the droop current Idroop. Table 4 on
page 21 shows the internal OCP threshold. It is
recommended to design Idroop without using the Rcomp
resistor.
FN7557.1
March 18, 2010
ISL62883C
For example, the OCP threshold is 60µA for 3-phase
solution. We will design Idroop to be 40.9µA at full load,
so the OCP trip level is 1.5x of the full load current.
For inductor DCR sensing, Equation 28 gives the DC
relationship of Vcn(s) and Io(s).
⎛
⎞
R ntcnet
⎜
DCR⎟
V Cn = ⎜ ------------------------------------------ × -------------⎟ × I o
R sum
N ⎟
⎜
⎝ R ntcnet + -------------⎠
N
(EQ.29)
(EQ.30)
Substitution of Equation 20 and application of the OCP
condition in Equation 30 gives Equation 31:
( R ntcs + R ntc ) × R p
2 × ---------------------------------------------------- × DCR × I omax
R ntcs + R ntc + R p
R i = ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------(
R
⎛ ntcs + R ntc ) × R p R sum⎞
N × ⎜ ---------------------------------------------------- + ---------------⎟ × I droopmax
N ⎠
⎝ R ntcs + R ntc + R p
(EQ.31)
where Iomax is the full load current, Idroopmax is the
corresponding droop current. For example, given N = 3,
Rsum = 3.65kΩ, Rp = 11kΩ, Rntcs = 2.61kΩ, Rntc = 10kΩ,
DCR = 0.88mΩ, Iomax = 51A and Idroopmax = 40.9µA,
Equation 31 gives Ri = 606Ω.
For resistor sensing, Equation 32 gives the DC
relationship of Vcn(s) and Io(s).
R sen
V Cn = ------------- × I o
N
(EQ.32)
Substitution of Equation 32 into Equation 1 gives
Equation 33:
2 R sen
I droop = ----- × ------------- × I o
N
Ri
(EQ.33)
Therefore
2R sen × I o
R i = ---------------------------N × I droop
(EQ.34)
Substitution of Equation 34 and application of the OCP
condition in Equation 30 gives Equation 35:
2R sen × I omax
R i = --------------------------------------N × I droopmax
(EQ.35)
where Iomax is the full load current, Idroopmax is the
corresponding droop current. For example, given N = 3,
Rsen = 1mΩ, Iomax = 51A and Idroopmax = 40.9µA,
Equation 35 gives Ri = 831Ω.
A resistor from COMP to GND can adjust the internal OCP
threshold, providing another dimension of fine-tune
26
For inductor DCR sensing, substitution of Equation 29
into Equation 2 gives the load line slope expression:
2R droop
R ntcnet
V droop
DCR
LL = ------------------- = ----------------------- × ------------------------------------------ × ------------Io
Ri
R sum
N
R ntcnet + --------------N
(EQ.36)
For resistor sensing, substitution of Equation 33 into
Equation 2 gives the load line slope expression:
2R sen × R droop
V droop
LL = ------------------- = ------------------------------------------N × Ri
Io
Therefore:
2R ntcnet × DCR × I o
R i = ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------R sum
N × ⎛ R ntcnet + ---------------⎞ × I droop
⎝
N ⎠
Load Line Slope
Refer to Figure 12.
(EQ. 28)
Substitution of Equation 28 into Equation 1 gives
Equation 29:
R ntcnet
2
DCR
I droop = ----- × ------------------------------------------ × ------------- × I o
R sum
Ri
N
R ntcnet + --------------N
flexibility. Table 4 shows the detail. It is recommended to
scale Idroop such that the default OCP threshold gives
approximately the desired OCP level, then use Rcomp to
fine tune the OCP level if necessary.
(EQ.37)
Substitution of Equation 30 and rewriting Equation 36,
or substitution of Equation 34 and rewriting Equation 37
give the same result in Equation 38:
Io
R droop = ---------------- × LL
I droop
(EQ. 38)
One can use the full load condition to calculate Rdroop.
For example, given Iomax = 51A, Idroopmax = 40.9µA
and LL = 1.9mΩ, Equation 38 gives Rdroop = 2.37kΩ.
It is recommended to start with the Rdroop value
calculated by Equation 38, and fine tune it on the actual
board to get accurate load line slope. One should record
the output voltage readings at no load and at full load for
load line slope calculation. Reading the output voltage at
lighter load instead of full load will increase the
measurement error.
Current Monitor
Refer to Equation 18 for the IMON pin current
expression.
Refer to Figures 1 and 2, the IMON pin current flows
through Rimon. The voltage across Rimon is expressed in
Equation 39:
(EQ.39)
V Rimon = 3 × I droop × R imon
Rewriting Equation 38 gives Equation 40:
Io
I droop = ------------------- × LL
R droop
(EQ.40)
Substitution of Equation 40 into Equation 39 gives
Equation 41:
3I o × LL
V Rimon = ---------------------- × R imon
R droop
(EQ.41)
Rewriting Equation 41 and application of full load
condition gives Equation 42:
V Rimon × R droop
R imon = ---------------------------------------------3I o × LL
(EQ.42)
For example, given LL = 1.9mΩ, Rdroop = 2.37kΩ,
VRimon = 999mV at Iomax = 51A, Equation 42 gives
Rimon = 8.14kΩ.
FN7557.1
March 18, 2010
ISL62883C
A capacitor Cimon can be paralleled with Rimon to filter
the IMON pin voltage. The RimonCimon time constant is
the user’s choice. It is recommended to have a time
constant long enough such that switching frequency
ripples are removed.
Compensator
Figure 18 shows the desired load transient response
waveforms. Figure 24 shows the equivalent circuit of a
voltage regulator (VR) with the droop function. A VR is
equivalent to a voltage source (= VID) and output
impedance Zout(s). If Zout(s) is equal to the load line
slope LL, i.e. constant output impedance, in the entire
frequency range, Vo will have square response when Io
has a square change.
i
Zout(s) = LL
T1(s) is the total loop gain of the voltage loop and the
droop loop. It always has a higher crossover frequency
than T2(s) and has more meaning of system stability.
T2(s) is the voltage loop gain with closed droop loop. It
has more meaning of output voltage response.
Design the compensator to get stable T1(s) and T2(s)
with sufficient phase margin, and output impedance
equal or smaller than the load line slope.
Vo
L
Q1
Vin
GATE Q2
DRIVER
io
Cout
o
LOAD LINE SLOPE
VID
VR
LOAD
Ω
20
V
o
EA
MOD.
COMP
FIGURE 24. VOLTAGE REGULATOR EQUIVALENT
CIRCUIT
Intersil provides a Microsoft Excel-based spreadsheet to
help design the compensator and the current sensing
network, so the VR achieves constant output impedance
as a stable system. Figure 27 shows a screenshot of the
spreadsheet.
A VR with active droop function is a dual-loop system
consisting of a voltage loop and a droop loop which is a
current loop. However, neither loop alone is sufficient to
describe the entire system. The spreadsheet shows two
loop gain transfer functions, T1(s) and T2(s), that
describe the entire system. Figure 25 conceptually
shows T1(s) measurement set-up and Figure 26
conceptually shows T2(s) measurement set-up. The VR
senses the inductor current, multiplies it by a gain of
the load line slope, then adds it on top of the sensed
output voltage and feeds it to the compensator. T(1) is
measured after the summing node, and T2(s) is
measured in the voltage loop before the summing node.
The spreadsheet gives both T1(s) and T2(s) plots.
However, only T2(s) can be actually measured on an
ISL62883C regulator.
27
VID
ISOLATION
TRANSFORMER
CHANNEL B
LOOP GAIN =
CHANNEL A
CHANNEL A
CHANNEL B
NETWORK
ANALYZER EXCITATION OUTPUT
FIGURE 25. LOOP GAIN T1(s) MEASUREMENT SET-UP
VO
L
Q1
VIN
GATE Q2
DRIVER
COUT
I
O
LOAD LINE SLOPE
20
MOD.
Ω
EA
COMP
CHANNEL B
LOOP GAIN=
CHANNEL A
VID
ISOLATION
TRANSFORMER
CHANNEL A
CHANNEL B
NETWORK
ANALYZER EXCITATION OUTPUT
FIGURE 26. LOOP GAIN T2(s) MEASUREMENT SET-UP
FN7557.1
March 18, 2010
Compensation & Current Sensing Network Design for Intersil Multiphase R^3 Regulators for IMVP-6.5
28
Jia Wei, [email protected], 919-405-3605
Attention: 1. "Analysis ToolPak" Add-in is required. To turn on, go to Tools--Add-Ins, and check "Analysis ToolPak".
2. Green cells require user input
Compensator Parameters
Operation Parameters
Controller Part Number: ISL6288x
§
s · §
s ·
¸ ˜ ¨1 ¸
KZi ˜ Zi ˜ ¨¨1 Phase Number:
2
2Sf z1 ¸¹ ¨©
2Sf z 2 ¸¹
©
AV ( s )
Vin:
12 volts
§
· §
·
s
s
¸ ˜ ¨1 ¸
Vo:
1.15 volts
s ˜ ¨1 ¨
2Sf p1 ¸¹ ¨©
2Sf p 2 ¸¹
©
Full Load Current:
50 Amps
Estimated Full-Load Efficiency:
87 %
Number of Output Bulk Capacitors:
3
Recommended Value
User-Selected Value
Capacitance of Each Output Bulk Capacitor:
470 uF
R1
2.870 k :
R1
2.87 k :
ESR of Each Output Bulk Capacitor:
4.5 m :
ESL of Each Output Bulk Capacitor:
0.6 nH
R2
387.248 k :
R2
412 k :
Number of Output Ceramic Capacitors:
30
R3
0.560 k :
R3
0.562 k :
Capacitance of Each Output Ceramic Capacitor:
10 uF
C1
188.980 pF
C1
150 pF
C2
498.514 pF
C2
390 pF
ESR of Each Output Ceramic Capacitor:
3 m:
ESL of Each Output Ceramic Capacitor:
3 nH
C3
32.245 pF
C3
32 pF
Switching Frequency:
300 kHz
Use User-Selected Value (Y/N)? N
Inductance Per Phase:
0.36 uH
CPU Socket Resistance:
0.9 m :
Performance and Stability
Desired Load-Line Slope:
1.9 m :
Desired ISUM- Pin Current at Full Load:
33.1 uA
T1 Bandwidth: 190kHz
T2 Bandwidth: 52kHz
(This sets the over-current protection level)
T1 Phase Margin: 63.4°
T2 Phase Margin: 94.7°
Changing the settings in red requires deep understanding of control loop design
Place the 2nd compensator pole fp2 at:
1.9 xfs (Switching Frequency)
Tune Ki to get the desired loop gain bandwidth
Loop Gain, Gain Curve
7V
7V
Recommended Value
Cn
0.294 uF
Ri 1014.245 :
(
(
(
)UHTXHQF\+]
(
Loop Gain, Phase Curve
7V
7V
(
(
(
)UHTXHQF\+]
(
(
(
(
(
)UHTXHQF\+]
(
(
(
(
(
3KDVHGHJUHH
(
3KDVHGHJUHH
Output Impedance, Gain Curve
0DJQLWXGHPRKP
*DLQG%
1.15
Operation Parameters
Inductor DCR
0.88 m :
Rsum
3.65 k :
Rntc
10 k :
Rntcs
2.61 k :
Rp
11 k :
Output Impedance, Phase Curve
(
(
(
(
)UHTXHQF\+]
(
(
FN7557.1
March 18, 2010
FIGURE 27. SCREENSHOT OF THE COMPENSATOR DESIGN SPREADSHEET
User Selected Value
Cn
0.294 uF
Ri
1000 :
ISL62883C
Tune the compensator gain factor Ki:
(Recommended Ki range is 0.8~2)
Current Sensing Network Parameters
ISL62883C
Optional Slew Rate Compensation Circuit
For 1-Tick VID Transition
Rdroop
Vcore
OPTIONAL
Ivid
Idroop_vid
COMP
E/A
Σ VDACDAC
INTERNAL
TO IC
---------------------------⎞
C out × LL dV core ⎛
C
× LL⎟
I droop ( t ) = -------------------------- × ------------------- × ⎜ 1 – e out
⎜
⎟
dt
R droop
⎝
⎠
(EQ.43)
where Cout is the total output capacitance.
VIDs
RTN
X1
When Vcore increases, the time domain expression of the
induced Idroop change is
–t
Rvid Cvid
FB
To control Vcore slew rate during 1-tick VID transition,
one can add the Rvid-Cvid branch, whose current Ivid
cancels Idroop_vid.
VID<0:6>
In the mean time, the Rvid-Cvid branch current Ivid time
domain expression is:
–t
VSSSENSE
VSS
--------------------------------⎞
dV fb ⎛
R
×C ⎟
vid
I vid ( t ) = C vid × ------------ × ⎜ 1 – e vid
⎜
⎟
dt
⎝
⎠
(EQ.44)
It is desired to let Ivid(t) cancel Idroop_vid(t). So there
are:
VID<0:6>
dV fb
C out × LL dV core
C vid × ------------ = -------------------------- × ------------------R droop
dt
dt
Vfb
(EQ.45)
and:
R vid × C vid = C out × LL
Ivid
(EQ.46)
The result is expressed in Equation 47:
R vid = R droop
Vcore
(EQ.47)
and:
Idroop_vid
FIGURE 28. OPTIONAL SLEW RATE COMPENSATION
CIRCUIT FOR1-TICK VID TRANSITION
During a large VID transition, the DAC steps through the
VIDs at a controlled slew rate. For example, the DAC
may change a tick (12.5mV) per 2.5µs per, controlling
output voltage Vcore slew rate at 5mV/µs.
Figure 28 shows the waveforms of 1-tick VID transition.
During 1-tick VID transition, the DAC output changes at
approximately 15mV/µs slew rate, but the DAC cannot
step through multiple VIDs to control the slew rate.
Instead, the control loop response speed determines
Vcore slew rate. Ideally, Vcore will follow the FB pin
voltage slew rate. However, the controller senses the
inductor current increase during the up transition, as the
Idroop_vid waveform shows, and will droop the output
voltage Vcore accordingly, making Vcore slew rate slow.
Similar behavior occurs during the down transition.
29
dV core
C out × LL -----------------dt
C vid = -------------------------- × ------------------R droop
dV fb
-----------dt
(EQ.48)
For example: given LL = 1.9mΩ, Rdroop = 2.37kΩ,
Cout = 1320µF, dVcore/dt = 5mV/µs and dVfb/dt =
15mV/µs, Equation 47 gives Rvid = 2.37kΩ and
Equation 48 gives Cvid = 350pF.
It’s recommended to select the calculated Rvid value and
start with the calculated Cvid value and tweak it on the
actual board to get the best performance.
During normal transient response, the FB pin voltage is
held constant, therefore is virtual ground in small signal
sense. The Rvid - Cvid network is between the virtual
ground and the real ground, and hence has no effect on
transient response.
FN7557.1
March 18, 2010
ISL62883C
Voltage Regulator Thermal Throttling
54µA
Therefore, a larger value thermistor such as 470k NTC
should be used.
64µA
VR_TT#
SW1
NTC
+
VNTC
-
+
RNTC
Rs
1.24V
At +105°C, 470kΩ NTC resistance becomes
(0.03322 × 470kΩ) = 15.6kΩ. With 60µA on the NTC pin,
the voltage is only (15.6kΩ × 60µA) = 0.937V. This value
is much lower than the threshold voltage of 1.20V.
Therefore, a regular resistor needs to be in series with
the NTC. The required resistance can be calculated by
Equation 51:
1.20V
---------------- – 15.6kΩ = 4.4kΩ
60μA
SW2
1.20V
INTERNAL TO
ISL62883C
FIGURE 29. CIRCUITRY ASSOCIATED WITH THE
THERMAL THROTTLING FEATURE
(EQ. 51)
4.42k is a standard resistor value. Therefore, the NTC
branch should have a 470k NTC and 4.42k resistor in
series. The part number for the NTC thermistor is
ERTJ0EV474J. It is a 0402 package. NTC thermistor will
be placed in the hot spot of the board.
Current Balancing
Figure 29 shows the thermal throttling feature with
hysteresis. An NTC network is connected between the
NTC pin and GND. At low temperature, SW1 is on and
SW2 connects to the 1.20V side. The total current
flowing out of the NTC pin is 60µA. The voltage on NTC
pin is higher than threshold voltage of 1.20V and the
comparator output is low. VR_TT# is pulled up by the
external resistor.
Refer to Figures 1 and 2. The ISL62883C achieves
current balancing through matching the ISEN pin
voltages. Rs and Cs form filters to remove the switching
ripple of the phase node voltages. It is recommended to
use rather long RsCs time constant such that the ISEN
voltages have minimal ripple and represent the DC
current flowing through the inductors. Recommended
values are Rs = 10kΩ and Cs = 0.22µF.
When temperature increases, the NTC thermistor
resistance decreases so the NTC pin voltage drops. When
the NTC pin voltage drops below 1.20V, the comparator
changes polarity and turns SW1 off and throws SW2 to
1.24V. This pulls VR_TT# low and sends the signal to
start thermal throttle. There is a 6µA current reduction
on NTC pin and 40mV voltage increase on threshold
voltage of the comparator in this state. The VR_TT#
signal will be used to change the CPU operation and
decrease the power consumption. When the temperature
drops down, the NTC thermistor voltage will go up. If
NTC voltage increases to above 1.24V, the comparator
will flip back. The external resistance difference in these
two conditions is shown in Equation 49:
Layout Guidelines
1.24V 1.20V
---------------- – ---------------- = 2.96k
54μA 60μA
(EQ. 49)
One needs to properly select the NTC thermistor value
such that the required temperature hysteresis
correlates to 2.96kΩ resistance change. A regular
resistor may need to be in series with the NTC
thermistor to meet the threshold voltage values.
For example, given Panasonic NTC thermistor with
B = 4700, the resistance will drop to 0.03322 of its
nominal at +105°C, and drop to 0.03956 of its nominal
at +100°C. If the required temperature hysteresis is
+105°C to +100°C, the required resistance of NTC will
be as shown in Equation 50:
2.96kΩ
----------------------------------------------------- = 467kΩ
( 0.03956 – 0.03322 )
30
(EQ. 50)
Table 6 shows the layout considerations. The designators
refer to the reference design shown in Figure 31.
TABLE 6. LAYOUT CONSIDERATION
PIN
NAME
LAYOUT CONSIDERATION
EP
GND
Create analog ground plane underneath
the controller and the analog signal
processing components. Don’t let the
power ground plane overlap with the
analog ground plane. Avoid noisy
planes/traces (e.g.: phase node) from
crossing over/overlapping with the analog
plane.
1
PGOOD
No special consideration
2
PSI#
No special consideration
3
RBIAS
4
VR_TT#
5
NTC
The NTC thermistor (R9) needs to be
placed close to the thermal source that is
monitor to determine thermal throttling.
Usually it’s placed close to phase-1
high-side MOSFET.
6
VW
Place the capacitor (C4) across VW and
COMP in close proximity of the controller
7
COMP
8
FB
Place the compensator components (C3,
C5, C6 R7, R11, R10 and C11) in general
proximity of the controller.
Place the RBIAS resistor (R16) in general
proximity of the controller. Low impedance
connection to the analog ground plane.
No special consideration
FN7557.1
March 18, 2010
ISL62883C
TABLE 6. LAYOUT CONSIDERATION (Continued)
PIN
9
NAME
LAYOUT CONSIDERATION
ISEN3/FB2 For ISEN3 function, capacitor C7
decouples it to VSUM-, then through
capacitor C20 to GND. Keep the decoupling
path short and minimize the loop
impedance.
For FB2 function, a capacitor connects this
pin to the COMP pin. Put the capacitor in
general proximity of the controller.
10
ISEN2
Capacitor C9 decouples it to VSUM-, then
through capacitor C20 to GND. Keep the
decoupling path short and minimize the
loop impedance.
11
ISEN1
Capacitor C10 decouples it to VSUM-, then
through capacitor C20 to GND. Keep the
decoupling path short and minimize the
loop impedance.
12
VSEN
13
RTN
14
ISUM-
15
ISUM+
TABLE 6. LAYOUT CONSIDERATION (Continued)
PIN
NAME
LAYOUT CONSIDERATION
18
IMON
Place the filter capacitor (C21) close to the
CPU.
19
BOOT1
Use decent wide trace (>30mil). Avoid any
sensitive analog signal trace from crossing
over or getting close.
20
UGATE1
21
PHASE1
Run these two traces in parallel fashion
with decent width (>30mil). Avoid any
sensitive analog signal trace from crossing
over or getting close. Recommend routing
PHASE1 trace to the phase-1 high-side
MOSFET (Q2 and Q8) source pins instead
of general phase-1 node copper.
22
VSSP1
23
LGATE1
24
PWM3
No special consideration.
25
VCCP
A capacitor (C22) decouples it to GND.
Place it in close proximity of the controller.
26
LGATE2
27
VSSP2
Run these two traces in parallel fashion
with decent width (>30mil). Avoid any
sensitive analog signal trace from crossing
over or getting close. Recommend routing
VSSP2 to the phase-2 low-side MOSFET
(Q5 and Q1) source pins instead of general
power ground plane for better
performance.
28
PHASE2
29
UGATE2
30
BOOT2
Use decent wide trace (>30mil). Avoid any
sensitive analog signal trace from crossing
over or getting close.
31~3
7
VID0~6
No special consideration.
VR_ON
No special consideration.
Place the VSEN/RTN filter (C12, C13) in
close proximity of the controller for good
decoupling.
Place the current sensing circuit in general
proximity of the controller.
Place C82 very close to the controller.
Place NTC thermistors R42 next to phase-1
inductor (L1) so it senses the inductor
temperature correctly.
Each phase of the power stage sends a pair
of VSUM+ and VSUM- signals to the
controller. Run these two signals traces in
parallel fashion with decent width
(>20mil).
IMPORTANT: Sense the inductor current by
routing the sensing circuit to the inductor
pads.
Route R63 and R71 to the phase-1 side
pad of inductor L1. Route R88 to the
output side pad of inductor L1.
Route R65 and R72 to the phase-2 side
pad of inductor L2. Route R90 to the
output side pad of inductor L2.
If possible, route the traces on a different
layer from the inductor pad layer and use
vias to connect the traces to the center of
the pads. If no via is allowed on the pad,
consider routing the traces into the pads
from the inside of the inductor. The
following drawings show the two preferred
ways of routing current sensing traces.
Inductor
Inductor
38
DPRSLPVR No special consideration.
40
CLK_EN# No special consideration.
Vias
Current-Sensing
Traces
16
VDD
A capacitor (C16) decouples it to GND.
Place it in close proximity of the controller.
17
VIN
A capacitor (C17) decouples it to GND.
Place it in close proximity of the controller.
31
Run these two traces in parallel fashion
with decent width (>30mil). Avoid any
sensitive analog signal trace from crossing
over or getting close. Recommend routing
PHASE2 trace to the phase-2 high-side
MOSFET (Q4 and Q10) source pins instead
of general phase-2 node copper.
39
Other
Current-Sensing
Traces
Run these two traces in parallel fashion
with decent width (>30mil). Avoid any
sensitive analog signal trace from crossing
over or getting close. Recommend routing
VSSP1 to the phase-1 low-side MOSFET
(Q3 and Q9) source pins instead of general
power ground plane for better
performance.
Other
Phase
Node
Minimize phase node copper area. Don’t
let the phase node copper overlap
with/getting close to other sensitive
traces. Cut the power ground plane to
avoid overlapping with phase node copper.
Minimize the loop consisting of input
capacitor, high-side MOSFETs and low-side
MOSFETs (e.g.: C27, C33, Q2, Q8, Q3 and
Q9).
FN7557.1
March 18, 2010
VIN
EP
41
C44
270UF
C57
270UF
C52
270UF
C39
270UF
C48
10UF
10UF
C56
C47
10UF
10UF
C43
10UF
C55
10UF
10UF
C42
C54
10UF
10UF
C40
C41
C50
10UF
10UF
C49
10UF
1
VSUM-
10K
R90
ISEN2
R72
3.65K
R65
10UF
C59
10UF
10UF
C34
C28
C27
VSUM+
IRF7821
Q6
10UF
10UF
C66
10UF
10UF
C65
10UF
10UF
C64
10UF
10UF
C63
10UF
10UF
C61
C60
10UF
C67
C74
C73
C72
C71
C68
21
1
Q9
22
C29
ISEN1
VSEN
RTN
ISUMISUM+
VDD
VIN
IMON
BOOT1
UGATE1
2.37K
Q3
DNP
Q12
VSUM+
U3
IN
VSUM-
PLACE NEAR L1
UGATE
PHASE
BOOT
FCCM
PWM
VCC
GND
LGATE
ISL6208
R73
VSUM-
IN
ISEN3
R67
VSSSENSE
VSUM+
IN
IN
FIGURE 30. 3-PHASE CPU APPLICATION REFERENCE DESIGN
ROUTE UGATE1 TRACE IN PARALLEL
WITH THE PHASE1 TRACE GOING TO
THE SOURCE OF Q2 AND Q8
1
IRF7832
Q13
3.65K
IRF7832
Q7
LAYOUT NOTE:
10K
R92
0.36UH
1UF
0.047UF
10K 2.61K
NTC
C21
R50
7.87K
R41
-----> R42
R38
11K
L3
0.22UF
C26
820PF 100
------------OPTIONAL
0.1UF
604
------------C81 R109
0.47UF
0.22UF
C82
C18
----C12
0.039UF
1UF
C17
C16
R30
----
10
C13
IN
R18
1000PF 330PF
-----
VSSSENSE
----
C32
0
OUT
VCCSENSE
10
IN
0
+5V
VIN
R58
OUT
IN
IN
IMON
OUT
VCORE
OPTIONAL
----
IN
R40
1
0
C20
R20
R17
OUT
R37
----
0.22UF
C10
C9
0.22UF
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
150PF 324K
----ISEN3 IN
ISEN2 IN
ISEN1 IN
0.22UF
23
C22
R11
C30
0
10UF
PHASE1
R56
VSUM-
VSSP1
ISEN2
+5V
10K
R88
LGATE1
ISEN3
IN
24
0.36UH
IRF7832
R71
FB
25
IRF7832
R63
PWM3
L1
26
3.65K
VCCP
ISL62883C
COMP
27
ISEN1
10
VW
LGATE2
DNP
Q8
VSUM+
390PF
NTC
IRF7821
Q2
VCORE
28
10UF
536
9
VSSP2
U6
10UF
C33
CLK_EN#
DPRSLPVR
VR_ON
VID6
VID5
VID4
VID3
VID2
VID1
VID0
R19
499
R12
R7
C11
VR_TT#
29
OUT
+5V
ROUTE LGATE1 TRACE IN PARALLEL
WITH THE VSSP1 TRACE GOING TO
THE SOURCE OF Q3 AND Q9
SAME RULE APPLIES TO OTHER PHASES
ISL62883C
39PF
R10
PHASE2
RBIAS
30
10UF
C35
7
UGATE2
PSI#
1UF
6
BOOT2
PGOOD
OUT
C6
C7
5
8
0.22UF
C4
1000PF
8.66K
------R4
DNP
------R6
NTC
TBD
4
Q11
OUT
560PF 2.37K
-------------
TBD
3
0.22UF
Q5
0.36UH
IRF7832
OUT
------------C83 R110
147K
R9
R8
0
IRF7832
OUT
---- OPTIONAL
2
C31
OUT
1
R16
R57
OUT
32
IN
VR_TT# OUT
C3
DNP
Q10
40
39
38
37
36
35
34
33
32
31
1.91K
IN
------- OPTIONAL
56UF
C24
R23
IN
PGOOD OUT
PSI#
+1.1V
IRF7821
Q4
L2
1.91K
+3.3V
IN
56UF
C25
VID0 IN
VID1 IN
VID2 IN
VID3 IN
VID4 IN
VID5 IN
VID6 IN
VR_ON IN
DPRSLPVR IN
CLK_EN# OUT
FN7557.1
March 18, 2010
IN
IN
IN
IN
IN
IN
IN
IN
IN
COMP
C6
C3
2.37K 390PF
47PF
390PF
C11
R10
R7
10UF
C27
10UF
C33
C24
C61
PWM3
LGATE1
ISEN3
VSSP1
ISEN2
PHASE1
R11
261K
3.48K
EP
IN
0
+5V
VIN
0.22UF
OUT
IMON
IN
VSSSENSE
0.047UF
IN
R40
0.22UF
1UF
C17
LAYOUT NOTE:
R63
R41
-----> R42
R38
0.1UF
----
----
DNP DNP
-----------OPTIONAL
C20
R30
1.07K
-----------C81 R109
11K
0.27UF
C18
0.033UF
C82
10
10K 2.61K
NTC
R18
C16
IN
C13
VSSSENSE
1
C30
0
C21
R37
----
R56
R50
0
7.15K
IN
----C12
VCCSENSE
10
OPTIONAL
----
1000PF 330PF
-----
IN
R17
1.82K
PLACE NEAR L1
FIGURE 31. 1-PHASE GPU APPLICATION REFERENCE DESIGN
ROUTE UGATE TRACE IN PARALLEL
WITH THE PHASE TRACE GOING TO
THE SOURCE OF Q2
ROUTE LGATE TRACE IN PARALLEL
WITH THE VSSP TRACE GOING TO
THE SOURCE OF Q3
ISL62883C
R20
VCORE
VCORE
DNP
C60
DNP
C59
DNP
C56
DNP
C55
10UF
C54
10UF
C41
22UF
C40
Q9
OUT
22UF
Q3
+5V
0.56UH
1.3MOHM
C52
IN
VCCP
ISL62883C
IRF7832
C39
LGATE2
L1
IRF7832
220UF
7MOHM
VW
VSSP2
U6
NTC
DNP DNP
------------
56UF
PHASE2
VR_TT#
220UF
7MOHM
R12
499
-------
UGATE2
RBIAS
----
C4
1000PF
PSI#
R16
47.5K
------R8
R9
Q2
BOOT2
ISEN1
VSEN
RTN
ISUMISUM+
VDD
VIN
IMON
BOOT1
UGATE1
C83 R110
DNP
DNP
--------
--------
IN
IRF7821
PGOOD
FB
OPTIONAL
----
----
8.66K
DNP
------R6
------R4
OPTIONAL
---- VR_TT#
----
------------
33
OPTIONAL -----
IN
1UF
OUT
IN
C22
PGOOD
+1.1V
VIN
CLK_EN#
DPRSLPVR
VR_ON
VID6
VID5
VID4
VID3
VID2
VID1
VID0
R19
IN
1.91K
VID0
VID1
VID2
VID3
VID4
VID5
VID6
VR_ON
DPRSLPVR
+3.3V
FN7557.1
March 18, 2010
ISL62883C
1-PHASE GPU Application Reference Design Bill of Materials
QTY
REFERENCE
VALUE
1
C11
390pF Multilayer Cap, 16V, 10%
GENERIC
H1045-00391-16V10
SM0603
1
C12
330pF Multilayer Cap, 16V, 10%
GENERIC
H1045-00331-16V10
SM0603
1
C13
1000pF Multilayer Cap, 16V, 10%
GENERIC
H1045-00102-16V10
SM0603
0
C15
DNP
2
C16, C22
1µF
Multilayer Cap, 16V, 20%
GENERIC
H1045-00105-16V20
SM0603
2
C17, C30
0.22µF Multilayer Cap, 25V, 10%
GENERIC
H1045-00224-25V10
SM0603
1
C18
0.27µF Multilayer Cap, 16V, 10%
GENERIC
H1045-00274-16V10
SM0603
1
C20
Multilayer Cap, 16V, 10%
GENERIC
H1045-00104-16V10
SM0603
1
C21
0.047µF Multilayer Cap, 16V, 10%
GENERIC
H1045-00473-16V10
SM0603
1
C24
56µF
Radial SP Series Cap, 25V, 20%
SANYO
25SP56M
CASE-CC
2
C27,C33
10µF
Multilayer Cap, 25V, 20%
GENERIC
H1065-00106-25V20
SM1206
1
C3
390pF Multilayer Cap, 16V, 10%
GENERIC
H1045-00391-16V10
SM0603
2
C39, C52
220µF SPCAP, 2V, 7MΩ
PANASONIC
EEXSX0D221E7
1
C4
1000pF Multilayer Cap, 16V, 10%
GENERIC
H1045-00102-16V10
2
C40, C41
22µF
Multilayer Cap, 6.3V, 20%
TAIYO
MURATA
Kyocera
TDK
SM0805
JMK212BJ226MG-T
GRM21BC80J226M
CM21X5R226M04AT
C2012X5R0J226MT009N
2
C54, C55
10µF
Multilayer Cap, 6.3V, 20%
TAIYO
MURATA
Kyocera
TDK
SM0805
JMK212BJ106MG-T
GRM21BR60J106ME19
CM21X5R106M06AT
C2012X5R0J106MT009N
1
C6
47pF
Multilayer Cap, 16V, 10%
GENERIC
H1045-00470-16V10
SM0603
1
C82
0.033µF Multilayer Cap, 16V, 10%
GENERIC
H1045-00333-16V10
SM0603
0
C56, C59-C61, C81, C83
1
L1
ETQP4LR56AFC
10mmx10mm
1
Q2
N-Channel Power MOSFET
IR
IRF7821
PWRPAKSO8
2
Q3, Q9
N-Channel Power MOSFET
IR
IRF7832
PWRPAKSO8
1
R10
2.37k
Thick Film Chip Resistor, 1%
GENERIC
H2511-02371-1/16W1
SM0603
1
R11
3.48k
Thick Film Chip Resistor, 1%
GENERIC
H2511-03481-1/16W1
SM0603
1
R16
47.5k
Thick Film Chip Resistor, 1%
GENERIC
H2511-04752-1/16W1
SM0603
2
R17, R18
10
Thick Film Chip Resistor, 1%
GENERIC
H2511-00100-1/16W1
SM0603
1
R19
1.91k
Thick Film Chip Resistor, 1%
GENERIC
H2511-01911-1/16W1
SM0603
0
R26
DNP
3
R20, R40, R56
0
Thick Film Chip Resistor, 1%
GENERIC
H2511-00R00-1/16W1
SM0603
1
R30
1.07k
Thick Film Chip Resistor, 1%
GENERIC
H2511-01071-1/16W1
SM0603
1
R37
1
Thick Film Chip Resistor, 1%
GENERIC
H2511-01R00-1/16W1
SM0603
1
R38
11k
Thick Film Chip Resistor, 1%
GENERIC
H2511-01102-1/16W1
SM0603
1
R41
2.61k
Thick Film Chip Resistor, 1%
GENERIC
H2511-02611-1/16W1
SM0603
1
R42
PANASONIC
ERT-J1VR103J
SM0603
1
R50
GENERIC
H2511-07151-1/16W1
SM0603
0.1µF
DESCRIPTION
MANUFACTURER
PART NUMBER
PACKAGE
SM0603
DNP
0.56µH Inductor, Inductance 20%, DCR 7% PANASONIC
10k NTC Thermistor, 10k NTC
7.15k
34
Thick Film Chip Resistor, 1%
FN7557.1
March 18, 2010
ISL62883C
1-PHASE GPU Application Reference Design Bill of Materials (Continued)
QTY
REFERENCE
VALUE
DESCRIPTION
MANUFACTURER
PART NUMBER
PACKAGE
1
R6
8.66k
Thick Film Chip Resistor, 1%
GENERIC
H2511-08661-1/16W1
SM0603
1
R63
1.82k
Thick Film Chip Resistor, 1%
GENERIC
H2511-01821-1/16W1
SM0805
1
R7
261k
Thick Film Chip Resistor, 1%
GENERIC
H2511-02613-1/16W1
SM0603
0
R109, R110, R4, R8, R9
DNP
1
U6
IMVP-6.5 PWM Controller
INTERSIL
ISL62883CHRTZ
QFN-40
2-PHASE CPU Application Reference Design Bill of Materials
QTY
REFERENCE
VALUE
1
C11
390pF
Multilayer Cap, 16V, 10%
GENERIC
H1045-00391-16V10
SM0603
1
C12
330pF
Multilayer Cap, 16V, 10%
GENERIC
H1045-00331-16V10
SM0603
1
C13
1000pF Multilayer Cap, 16V, 10%
GENERIC
H1045-00102-16V10
SM0603
1
C15
0.01µF Multilayer Cap, 16V, 10%
GENERIC
H1045-00103-16V10
SM0603
3
C16, C22, C26
Multilayer Cap, 16V, 20%
GENERIC
H1045-00105-16V20
SM0603
1
C18
0.47µF Multilayer Cap, 16V, 10%
GENERIC
H1045-00474-16V10
SM0603
1
C20
Multilayer Cap, 16V, 10%
GENERIC
H1045-00104-16V10
SM0603
8
C21, C7, C9, C10, C17,
C30, C31, C32
0.22µF Multilayer Cap, 16V, 10%
GENERIC
H1045-00224-16V10
SM0603
2
C24, C25
56µF
Radial SP Series Cap, 25V, 20% SANYO
25SP56M
CASE-CC
6
C27, C28, C29, C33,
C34, C35
10µF
Multilayer Cap, 25V, 20%
GENERIC
H1065-00106-25V20
SM1206
1
C3
150pF
Multilayer Cap, 16V, 10%
GENERIC
H1045-00151-16V10
SM0603
4
C39, C44, C52, C57
270µF
SPCAP, 2V, 4MΩ
POLYMER CAP, 2.5V, 4.5MΩ
PANASONIC
KEMET
EEXSX0D471E4
T520V277M2R5A(1)E4R
5-6666
1
C4
GENERIC
H1045-00102-16V10
24
C40-C43, C47-C50,
C53-C56, C59-C69, C78
10µF
Multilayer Cap, 6.3V, 20%
TAIYO
MURATA
Kyocera
TDK
SM0805
JMK212BJ106MG-T
GRM21BR60J106ME19
CM21X5R106M06AT
C2012X5R0J106MT009N
1
C6
39pF
Multilayer Cap, 16V, 10%
GENERIC
H1045-00390-16V10
SM0603
1
C81
820pF
Multilayer Cap, 16V, 10%
GENERIC
H1045-00821-16V10
SM0603
1
C82
0.039µF Multilayer Cap, 16V, 10%
GENERIC
H1045-00393-16V10
SM0603
1
C83
GENERIC
H1045-00561-16V10
SM0603
3
L1, L2, L3
NEC-TOKIN
PANASONIC
MPCH1040LR36
ETQP4LR36AFC
10mmx10mm
3
Q2, Q4, Q6
N-Channel Power MOSFET
IR
IRF7821
PWRPAKSO8
6
Q3, Q5, Q7, Q9, Q11,
Q13
N-Channel Power MOSFET
IR
IRF7832
PWRPAKSO8
3
Q8, Q10, Q12
DNP
1
R10
536
Thick Film Chip Resistor, 1%
GENERIC
H2511-05360-1/16W1
SM0603
1
R109
100
Thick Film Chip Resistor, 1%
GENERIC
H2511-01000-1/16W1
SM0603
1
R11
2.37k
Thick Film Chip Resistor, 1%
GENERIC
H2511-02371-1/16W1
SM0603
1
R110
2.37k
Thick Film Chip Resistor, 1%
GENERIC
H2511-02371-1/16W1
SM0603
1µF
0.1µF
DESCRIPTION
1000pF Multilayer Cap, 16V, 10%
560pF
Multilayer Cap, 16V, 10%
0.36µH Inductor, Inductance 20%,
DCR 5%
35
MANUFACTURER
PART NUMBER
PACKAGE
SM0603
FN7557.1
March 18, 2010
ISL62883C
2-PHASE CPU Application Reference Design Bill of Materials (Continued)
QTY
REFERENCE
VALUE
DESCRIPTION
1
R12
499
Thick Film Chip Resistor, 1%
GENERIC
H2511-04990-1/16W1
SM0603
1
R16
147k
Thick Film Chip Resistor, 1%
GENERIC
H2511-01473-1/16W1
SM0603
2
R17, R18
10
Thick Film Chip Resistor, 1%
GENERIC
H2511-00100-1/16W1
SM0603
4
R19, R71, R72, R73
10k
Thick Film Chip Resistor, 1%
GENERIC
H2511-01002-1/16W1
SM0603
1
R23
1.91k
Thick Film Chip Resistor, 1%
GENERIC
H2511-01911-1/16W1
SM0603
1
R26
82.5
Thick Film Chip Resistor, 1%
GENERIC
H2511-082R5-1/16W1
SM0603
5
R20, R40, R56, R57,
R58
0
Thick Film Chip Resistor, 1%
GENERIC
H2511-00R00-1/16W1
SM0603
1
R30
604
Thick Film Chip Resistor, 1%
GENERIC
H2511-06040-1/16W1
SM0603
4
R37, R88, R90, R92
1
Thick Film Chip Resistor, 1%
GENERIC
H2511-01R00-1/16W1
SM0603
1
R38
11k
Thick Film Chip Resistor, 1%
GENERIC
H2511-01102-1/16W1
SM0603
1
R4
DNP
1
R41
2.61k
Thick Film Chip Resistor, 1%
GENERIC
H2511-02611-1/16W1
SM0603
1
R42
PANASONIC
ERT-J1VR103J
SM0603
1
R50
7.87k
Thick Film Chip Resistor, 1%
GENERIC
H2511-07871-1/16W1
SM0603
1
R6
8.66k
Thick Film Chip Resistor, 1%
GENERIC
H2511-08662-1/16W1
SM0603
3
R63, R65, R67
3.65k
Thick Film Chip Resistor, 1%
GENERIC
H2511-03651-1/16W1
SM0805
2
R8, R9
DNP
1
R7
324k
Thick Film Chip Resistor, 1%
GENERIC
H2511-03243-1/16W1
SM0603
1
U3
Synchronous Rectified MOSFET INTERSIL
Driver
ISL6208CBZ
SOIC8_150_50
1
U6
IMVP-6.5 PWM Controller
ISL62883CHRTZ
QFN-40
10k NTC Thermistor, 10k NTC
36
MANUFACTURER
INTERSIL
PART NUMBER
PACKAGE
FN7557.1
March 18, 2010
ISL62883C
Typical Performance
92
1.10
90
1.08
1.06
86
VIN = 8V
84
1.04
VIN = 12.6V
82
VOUT (V)
EFFICIENCY(%)
88
VIN = 19V
80
78
1.02
1.00
0.98
76
0.96
74
0.94
72
70
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
50
55
60
0.92
65
0
5
10
15
20
25
IOUT (A)
FIGURE 32. 3-PHASE CCM EFFICIENCY,
VID = 1.075V, VIN1 = 8V, VIN2 = 12.6V
AND VIN3 = 19V
30 35 40
IOUT (A)
45
50
55
60
65
FIGURE 33. 3-PHASE CCM LOAD LINE, VID = 1.075V,
VIN1 = 8V, VIN2 = 12.6V AND VIN3 = 19V
95
0.875
85
VOUT (V)
EFFICIENCY (%)
0.885
VIN = 8V
90
80
VIN = 12.6V
75
VIN = 19V
0.865
0.855
70
0.845
65
0.835
60
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8 9
IOUT(A)
0.825
0
10 11 12 13 14 15
FIGURE 34. 2-PHASE CCM EFFICIENCY,
VID = 0.875V, VIN1 = 8V, VIN2 = 12.6V
AND VIN3 = 19V
1
2
3
4
5
6
10 11 12 13 14 15
7 8 9
IOUT (A)
FIGURE 35. 2-PHASE CCM LOAD LINE, VID = 0.875V,
VIN1 = 8V, VIN2 = 12.6V AND VIN3 = 19V
95
0.885
85
0.875
VIN = 8V
VOUT (V)
EFFICIENCY (%)
90
80
75
VIN = 12.6V
70
65
60
0.1
0.865
0.855
0.845
0.835
VIN = 19V
1
10
100
IOUT (A)
FIGURE 36. 1-PHASE DEM EFFICIENCY, VID = 0.875V,
VIN1 = 8V, VIN2 = 12.6V AND VIN3 = 19V
37
0.825
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10 11 12 13 14 15
IOUT (A)
FIGURE 37. 1-PHASE DEM LOAD LINE, VID = 0.875V,
VIN1 = 8V, VIN2 = 12.6V AND VIN3 = 19V
FN7557.1
March 18, 2010
ISL62883C
Typical Performance (Continued)
FIGURE 38. SOFT-START, VIN = 19V, IO = 0A,
VID = 0.95V, Ch1: PHASE1, Ch2: VO, Ch3:
PHASE2, Ch4: PHASE3
FIGURE 39. SHUT DOWN, VIN = 19V, IO = 1A,
VID = 0.95V, Ch1: PHASE1, Ch2: VO, Ch3:
PHASE2, Ch4: PHASE3
FIGURE 40. CLK_EN# DELAY, VIN = 19V, IO = 2A,
VID = 1.5V, Ch1: PHASE1, Ch2: VO, Ch3:
IMON, Ch4: CLK_EN#
FIGURE 41. PRE-CHARGED START UP, VIN = 19V,
VID = 0.95V, Ch1: PHASE1, Ch2: VO, Ch3:
IMON, Ch4: VR_ON
1000
IMON-VSSSENSE (mV)
900
800
700
600
500
VIN = 19V
400
300
TARGET
VIN = 12V
200
100
0
0
FIGURE 42. STEADY STATE, VIN = 19V, IO = 51A,
VID = 0.95V, Ch1: PHASE1, Ch2: VO, Ch3:
PHASE2, Ch4: PHASE3
38
VIN = 8V
5
10
15
20
25
30
IOUT (A)
35
40
45
50
FIGURE 43. IMON, VID = 1.075V
FN7557.1
March 18, 2010
ISL62883C
Typical Performance (Continued)
FIGURE 44. LOAD TRANSIENT RESPONSE WITH
OVERSHOOT REDUCTION FUNCTION
DISABLED, VIN = 12V, SV CLARKSFIELD
CPU TEST CONDITION: VID = 0.95V,
IO = 12A/51A, di/dt = “FASTEST”,
LL = 1.9mW
FIGURE 45. LOAD TRANSIENT RESPONSE WITH
OVERSHOOT REDUCTION FUNCTION
DISABLED, VIN = 12V, SV CLARKSFIELD
CPU TEST CONDITION: VID = 0.95V,
IO = 12A/51A, di/dt = “FASTEST”,
LL = 1.9mW
FIGURE 46. LOAD TRANSIENT RESPONSE WITH
OVERSHOOT REDUCTION FUNCTION
DISABLED, VIN = 12V, SV CLARKSFIELD
CPU TEST CONDITION: VID = 0.95V,
IO = 12A/51A, di/dt = “FASTEST”,
LL = 1.9mW
FIGURE 47. LOAD TRANSIENT RESPONSE WITH
OVERSHOOT REDUCTION FUNCTION
DISABLED, VIN = 12V, SV CLARKSFIELD
CPU TEST CONDITION: VID = 0.95V,
IO = 12A/51A, di/dt = “FASTEST”,
LL = 1.9mW
39
FN7557.1
March 18, 2010
ISL62883C
Typical Performance (Continued)
FIGURE 48. 2-PHASE MODE LOAD INSERTION
RESPONSE WITH OVERSHOOT REDUCTION
FUNCTION DISABLED, 3-PHASE
CONFIGURATION, PSI# = 0,
DPRSLPVR = 0, VIN = 12V, VID = 0.875V,
IO = 4A/17A, di/d = “FASTEST
FIGURE 49. 2-PHASE MODE LOAD INSERTION
RESPONSE WITH OVERSHOOT REDUCTION
FUNCTION DISABLED, 3-PHASE
CONFIGURATION, PSI# = 0, DPRSLPVR=0,
VIN = 12V, VID = 0.875V, IO = 4A/17A,
di/dt = “FASTEST”
FIGURE 50. PHASE ADDING/DROPPING (PSI#
TOGGLE), IO = 15A, VID = 1.075V,
Ch1: PHASE1, Ch2: VO, Ch3: PHASE2,
Ch4: PHASE3
FIGURE 51. DEEPER SLEEP MODE ENTRY/EXIT,
IO = 1.5A, HFM VID = 1.075V,
LFM VID = 0.875V, DEEPER SLEEP
VID = 0.875V, Ch1: PHASE1, Ch2: VO, Ch3:
PHASE2, Ch4: PHASE3
FIGURE 52. VID ON THE FLY, 1.075V/0.875V,
3-PHASE CONFIGURATION, PSI# = 1,
DPRSLPVR=0, Ch1: PHASE1, Ch2: VO,
Ch3: PHASE2, Ch4: PHASE3
FIGURE 53. VID ON THE FLY, 1.075V/0.875V,
3-PHASE CONFIGURATION, PSI# = 0,
DPRSLPVR=0, Ch1: PHASE1, Ch2: VO,
Ch3: PHASE2, Ch4: PHASE3
40
FN7557.1
March 18, 2010
ISL62883C
Typical Performance (Continued)
FIGURE 54. VID ON THE FLY, 1.075V/0.875V,
3-PHASE CONFIGURATION, PSI# = 0,
DPRSLPVR = 1, Ch1: PHASE1, Ch2: VO,
Ch3: PHASE2, Ch4: PHASE3
FIGURE 55. VID ON THE FLY, 1.075V/0.875V,
3-PHASE CONFIGURATION, PSI# = 1,
DPRSLPVR = 1, Ch1: PHASE1, Ch2: VO,
Ch3: PHASE2, Ch4: PHASE3
Phase Margin
Gain
FIGURE 56. LOAD TRANSIENT RESPONSE WITH
OVERSHOOT REDUCTION FUNCTION
ENABLED, VIN = 12V, SV CLARKSFIELD
CPU TEST CONDITION: VID = 0.95V,
IO = 12A/51A, di/dt = “FASTEST”,
LL = 1.9mW, Ch1: LGATE1, Ch2: VO, Ch3:
LGATE2, Ch4: ISL6208 LGATE
FIGURE 57. REFERENCE DESIGN LOOP GAIN T2(s)
MEASUREMENT RESULT
5.0
4.5
4.0
Z(f) (mΩ)
3.5
3.0
PSI# = 0, DPRSLPVR = 0, 2-PHASE CCM
2.5
2.0
1.5
1.0
PSI# = 1, DPRSLPVR = 0, 3-PHASE CCM
0.5
0.0
1k
FIGURE 58. 1.55V OVP, Ch1: PHASE1, Ch2: VO, Ch3:
LGATE1
41
100k
10k
FREQUENCY (Hz)
1M
FIGURE 59. REFERENCE DESIGN FDIM RESULT
FN7557.1
March 18, 2010
ISL62883C
Typical Performance (Continued)
FIGURE 60. 1-PHASE GPU MODE SOFT-START,
DPRSLPVR=0, VIN = 8V, IO = 0A,
VID = 1.2375V, Ch1: PHASE1, Ch2: VO
FIGURE 61. 1-PHASE GPU MODE SHUT DOWN,
VIN = 8V, IO = 1A, VID = 1.2375V, Ch1:
PHASE1, Ch2: VO
FIGURE 62. 1-PHASE GPU MODE VID TRANSITION,
DPRSLPVR=0, IO = 2A,
VID = 1.2375V/1.0375V, Ch2: VO,
Ch3: VID4
FIGURE 63. 1-PHASE GPU MODE VID TRANSITION,
DPRSLPVR=1, IO = 2A,
VID = 1.2375V/1.0375V, Ch2: VO,
Ch3: VID4
Products
Intersil Corporation is a leader in the design and manufacture of high-performance analog semiconductors. The
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handheld products, and notebooks. Intersil's product families address power management and analog signal
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*For a complete listing of Applications, Related Documentation and Related Parts, please see the respective device
information page on intersil.com: ISL62883C
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42
FN7557.1
March 18, 2010
ISL62883C
Package Outline Drawing
L40.5x5
40 LEAD THIN QUAD FLAT NO-LEAD PLASTIC PACKAGE
Rev 0, 4/07
4X 3.60
5.00
A
36X 0.40
B
6
PIN 1
INDEX AREA
6
(4X)
3.50
5.00
PIN #1 INDEX AREA
0.15
40X 0.4
±0 .1
TOP VIEW
b
0.20
0.10 M
C
A B
BOTTOM VIEW
PACKAGE OUTLINE
0.40
0.750
SEE DETAIL “X”
// 0.10 C
C
BASE PLANE
SEATING PLANE
0.08 C
0.050
3.50
5.00
SIDE VIEW
(36X 0..40)
0.2 REF
C
5
0.00 MIN
0.05 MAX
(40X 0.20)
(40X 0.60)
DETAIL "X"
TYPICAL RECOMMENDED LAND PATTERN
NOTES:
1. Dimensions are in millimeters.
Dimensions in ( ) for Reference Only.
2. Dimensioning and tolerancing conform to AMSE Y14.5m-1994.
3. Unless otherwise specified, tolerance : Decimal ± 0.05
4. Dimension b applies to the metallized terminal and is measured
between 0.15mm and 0.27mm from the terminal tip.
5. Tiebar shown (if present) is a non-functional feature.
6. The configuration of the pin #1 identifier is optional, but must be
located within the zone indicated. The pin #1 indentifier may be
either a mold or mark feature.
43
FN7557.1
March 18, 2010